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After the ink had dried, Jounouchi Hiromi held the couplet written by Chen Yu at the entrance of their ho. With Chen Yu's help, she managed to paste the couplet on both sides of the door.

"Mr. Chen Yu, why do you still have one more strip in your hand?" Seeing Chen Yu holding another strip of red paper with writing on it, Jounouchi Hiromi looked carefully at both sides of the door, noticed they were both affixed, and asked in confusion, "Where is this strip supposed to be pasted?"

Facing Jounouchi Hiromi's puzzled look, Chen Yu motioned for her to step down from the stool. Then he climbed up, indicating that she should steady it. After she did so, he pasted the final red strip at the very top of the door fra.

"This is called the horizontal scroll. In addition to the first and second lines of the couplet, there must also be a horizontal scroll," Chen Yu explained with a smile as he jumped down from the stool. "The function of the couplet is actually quite similar to Japan's Kadomatsu; it's just that the Kadomatsu is for welcoming gods, while the couplet is for warding off evil. Both are traditional customs; they just vary because of different national customs. If you're interested in these things, Hiromi, I rember I have a book dedicated to Chinese folklore that you could read. Furthermore, all the TV programs today are about New Year's customs, so you could also watch the television."

"I want to read it! Give the book later, Mr. Chen Yu! I'm very interested in these kinds of cultural things!" Jounouchi Hiromi expressed her excitent, having an irrepressible interest in traditional culture.

"Sure, but let's talk about that tonight. This afternoon, you'll join my mom in playing mahjong," Chen Yu readily agreed to Jounouchi Hiromi's request, but he still discussed it with her first. After all, it was the New Year, and it would seem sowhat inappropriate for her to be reading a book by herself.

"No problem! But aren't the rules of Chinese mahjong a bit different from the Japanese versions? What if I don't know how to play?" Jounouchi Hiromi kindly agreed, although she was a bit worried about the rules of Chinese mahjong, as she said, she didn't know them.

"That's simple, you'll know how to play after a few rounds." Chen Yu laughed and gave the standard answer to her concern.

—————————————————————

In the hospital, Zhu Yiting also learned from Director Liu about Chen Yu's treatnt suggestions for Wang Jiancheng, and she instantly fell into a dilemma.

As a surgeon who also graduated from a prestigious school, she obviously understood the trendous strain on the body of performing stomach and liver cancer surgeries within a short tifra, as well as the postoperative survival rate and quality of life issues that Chen Yu was concerned about—issues that were inescapable.

Yet, as a surgeon, Zhu Yiting was also well aware that hepatic hilum bile duct cancer, as one of the most difficult to treat malignant tumors in the digestive system, spelled a countdown to death once one was diagnosed with it.

Although there are nurous treatnt thods for this cancer, from the preferred surgical treatnt to chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy, biological therapy, and interventional therapy, even traditional Chinese Herbal dicine treatnts in China, of these diverse thods, the only one that could provide a patient with a chance for a cure was surgical removal of the tumor.

And this disease's surgical resection rate has increased from less than 10% in 1985 to 64.1% through the efforts of generations of dical workers. Only through surgical removal could one completely cure this cancer, and surgery's improvent in postoperative quality of life was far superior to various drainage procedures.

Therefore, when she first learned about this cancer at school, the teacher who taught Zhu Yiting had already inford her that an aggressive surgical approach should be adopted for hepatic hilum bile duct cancer, striving for the tumor's removal.

In fact, surgery was indeed the only current thod to cure hepatic hilum bile duct cancer—at least until the broad-spectrum anti-cancer drug developed by Chen Yu was officially introduced to the market. Before then, surgery was the sole curative thod.

Zhu Yiting, as a surgeon, understood the burden that surgery would place on Wang Jiancheng, but under these circumstances, it was impossible for her to adopt other thods of treatnt. Any other way was rely buying ti, and once the condition worsened or the tumor spread, not even surgery would be an option.

However, the reply that Director Liu had heard from Professor Zhang, which he shared with Zhu Yiting, presented a new treatnt thod before her.

Of course, Zhu Yiting was aware of the paper Chen Yu published on broad-spectrum cancer treatnt. Although there was little information dostically, with the developed network technology, Zhu Yiting could manage to find Chen Yu's papers if she searched for them.

In Chen Yu's papers, she saw a new approach to cancer treatnt, suppressing tumor cell activity with dication. This wasn't exactly a novel concept, yet prior to Chen Yu proposing broad-spectrum cancer treatnt, most thods targeted a specific type of cancer and had significant side effects, failing to maintain long-term suppression of tumor activity, especially in controlling the spread of tumor cells.

Usually, such a thod was only used when surgery wasn't an option, or the patient refused surgery, aiming to extend their survival ti and improve their quality of life. The treatnt approach proposed by Chen Yu, however, was a completely new concept and approach with epoch-making significance for cancer treatnt.

For Wang Jiancheng, being able to adopt such a thod to suppress liver tumor activity, waiting until his body recuperated from the debilitation of stomach tumor surgery to undergo liver tumor surgery, or even just continuing dication without surgery, would all be far better options than going straight to the operating table today and gambling with his life.

However, since Chen Yu published his paper in Japan and is conducting research in Japanese hospitals, logically, even if the dication was officially on the market, entering China would require lengthy approval procedures and clinical verification.

Zhu Yiting was clear that even if the state greenlit the introduction of such dication, the completion of the entire process would still be too long for a cancer patient to wait.

Therefore, if it wasn't for Chen Yu, through his alma mater, facilitating cooperation with Tokyo University dical School Hospital, allowing Wang Jiancheng to receive this dication under the guise of academic research, even if he was able to enlist Xiehe's experts to operate as he said he could, the chance of survival would only be a toss-up, and optimistically, the postoperative survival ti was estimated at only five years.

While Chen Yu's approach on the surface seed to treat Wang Jiancheng as a test subject, in reality, it circumvented nurous obstacles, allowing him access to this dication for treatnt.

You are reading 21st Century Necromancer Chapter 340 337: Surgery and Medicine (Requesting Monthly Ti on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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