At the scene, the patient continued to convulse, and it would be difficult to stop the convulsions without medical intervention.
Wen Zihan took the aluminum box and moved quickly and skillfully. He opened the aluminum cover and took out the filiform needle from inside, then pulled up the clothes on the patient's arms and calves.
Use the other hand to pinch the sterile cotton ball and prepare to disinfect the skin before inserting the needle.
Swish, swish, in the blink of an eye, in a few seconds, several filiform needles penetrated into several acupuncture points on the human body.
The speed is scary!
Haven't you heard that it takes a long time to accurately determine the acupoints for acupuncture?
The air was filled with silence.
It was so quiet that one felt as if everyone had traveled through time and into another world.
The scene where Dr. Wen’s skills were demonstrated: ...so shocking.
The Western medicine doctors couldn't understand it, so they had no choice but to ask another Chinese medicine doctor. They were even more surprised to see that Dr. Zhou was dumbfounded.
What? Even Chinese medicine doctors can’t understand?
Dr. Zhou didn't understand.
Aren't you so young? A Chinese medicine student who seems to have no job a few years after graduation? How can he use this acupuncture technique like an old doctor?
If you want to go faster, it's best to hold several needles in one hand at the same time. Only old doctors who have practiced for many years can do this.
Anyway, she has seen very few acupuncture doctors who can do this.
The advantage of holding several needles at the same time is self-evident, as it can avoid any unnecessary waste of time in taking out needles.
In the medical circle, first aid time is even more important than life.
Let’s talk about Dr. Wen’s acupuncture technique. There are various acupuncture techniques and the overall technique is intricate. This is also the high threshold for acupuncture doctors to truly achieve proficiency.
In simple terms, acupuncture can be divided into single-hand technique and double-hand technique.
To put it simply, the difference between the two methods is like a nurse giving an injection. When the needle enters the human body, due to the different thickness and tightness of the skin in various parts of the human body, the doctor must use techniques such as changing the intensity and angle to allow the needle to enter.
The purpose of designated parts of the human body.
From the above description, we can know that in general, it is more difficult to do it with one hand than with both hands. Especially some acupuncture points are more difficult to penetrate into the skin. The soft filiform needles of acupuncture must be much more difficult to penetrate than the syringe needles of Western medicine.
The technique demonstrated by Wen Zihan is to insert acupuncture into multiple acupuncture points with one hand.
Such strength and cleverness? Both are female Chinese medicine doctors. Dr. Zhou thinks that she is completely inferior to the other doctor. Maybe she is not an acupuncture doctor and the other doctor probably majored in this field.
After a few acupuncture points were inserted into the patient's acupuncture points, the convulsions gradually stopped. Unexpectedly, the patient suddenly had a tendency to bend over and was about to vomit?!
Dr. Zhou's forehead was suddenly sweating profusely, and he called the nurse: "You may need to suction sputum."
There was no sputum suction machine on site, so the nurse took a syringe and connected it to the sputum suction tube to turn it into a temporary and simple suction device, ready to suction the patient's vomitus fluid.
When the Western medicine doctors around me saw this, their heartbeats started to rise in their throats.
Soon after, the hand that had just inserted the needle began to rotate back and forth on the needle handle.
Looking at Dr. Wen Zihan's movements, laymen felt that on the one hand they were familiar, but on the other hand they felt deeply mysterious again.
Anyway, from the perspective of Western medicine, it is not very clear: can a needle be turned around on the patient's skin to cure the disease? It seems to have no scientific basis.
Questions work wonders.
After twisting, the patient first saw signs of slight twitching in the muscles under the calf acupoint where the needle was located.
Everyone's eyes widened again: What's wrong with Dr. Wen? After stopping the patient's convulsions, is he trying to make the patient relapse into convulsions again?
of course not.
This is called Deqi of acupuncture, and to put it in layman’s terms: it is one of the effective manifestations of acupuncture techniques.
Thank you for your support, good night, dear friends~