Chapter 3587【3587】Drop down

Recalling when the accident started, it should be counted from when the poisonous king opened his mouth after work. Mr. Zhang, the Poison King is the Poison King, that's right, he made you "poison" and die.

What is it if it is not poison? When he came to the patient's bed and bent over to check it, he was grabbed by the patient's irritated hand and took off the anti-splash surgical mask, and then a mouthful of blood spit out by the patient coughed violently and splashed on the left side of his face.

Don't think that doctors are really "insensitive" and feel nothing when splashed by pollutants. No, like Dr. Lin Hao, he is just an individual, without any special constitution, and his reaction is no different from that of normal people.

In an instant, he felt like vomiting blood with the patient.

How to do? Being a doctor can only endure and must endure, until the stomach is churning like Lin Hao, Fan who pretends to be a genius doctor with a cool face doesn't seem to care.

Under this situation, it is not easy for the brain to successfully deceive oneself, so for the present plan, I have to desperately complain about Mr. Zhang, the poison king.

Crazy going crazy.

Immediately after the patient's mouth came out another mouthful of blood. His pupils tightened.

At this moment, his brain didn't know if it was because he had been trained in the clinic for more than a year. His immediate reaction was not to hide the blood, but to hold the patient's head to the left with his hands and let the blood flow from the patient's trachea. Let it flow out as smoothly as possible to avoid choking.

Watching the blood coughed up by the patient one by one, Lin Hao felt his gloved fingertips were cold, and the sticky blood on his left face was thrown to the back of his head.

If this continues, sooner or later he will suffocate. This patient is going to die. How can he not make him shiver.

Beep, beep, the alarm on the monitor kept going off. First, the patient's cough caused the huge fluctuating curve of the heart rate to sound an alarm, and now the blood oxygen saturation value is bouncing red.

Lin Hao gasped suddenly.

He guessed it right, the blood oxygen dropped all the way, almost below 80%.

"Doctor Lin." The nurse ran back with a suction tube and a series of suction devices including a negative pressure bottle, and asked the doctor for his advice.

The main reason is that the patient has just been sent to the emergency department of the hospital, and everything has not had time to prepare for a sudden change in his condition, so the medical staff can only deal with it in a hurry.

"Suck, suck—" Lin Hao spat out two words.

The nurse connected the connecting tube negative pressure bottle to the central negative pressure suction device on the bedside of the patient, turned on the negative pressure, and shouted: "Okay." Then, following the doctor's advice, the gloved hand picked up the suction tube and approached the patient. After checking the mouth, nose and mouth of the patient, he found that it was difficult for the patient to cough and close the mouth to **** out blood clots, so he shouted: "Who can help, open the patient's mouth."

Colleagues shouted, another nurse arrived at the scene to support, saw the doctor on the scene holding the patient's head, and reminded: "Dr. Lin."

Lin Hao seemed to be in a daze.

Nurse Li ran over again and asked the attending doctor: "Do you want to contact the internal medicine department or the surgery department?"

The more disordered the situation, the more afraid of urgency. However, clinically, the emergency situation is often accompanied by non-stop noise around, just like the tsunami sound of the vegetable market can drown the heads of the central decision-makers.

Lin Hao's ears were buzzing violently, and his head could hardly remember what he was thinking half a second ago. You said that in such a state, how can he maintain normal and coherent thinking and then make scientific, logical and deliberate medical decisions.

It is too difficult. It turns out that it is so difficult after becoming a doctor to practice medicine independently.

(end of this chapter)