Chapter 14
Twenty minutes felt neither short nor long.
Especially when soone by your side kept bombarding you with questions, one after another, and you couldn't just shoo them away... it felt like an eternity.
Garrett focused one eye on the child's throat and the other on the priest, gesturing and explaining until his mouth went dry. Finally, soone shouted, "It's turning red! A big red circle!"
Peering in, the boy's left forearm looked smooth and clear, no issues there. But on the right forearmwhere the fish at was applieda big patch had turned red, swollen with a noticeable cluster in the middle. Surrounding the redness were faint, irregular red lines, resembling insect legs at a glance.
Redness with pseudo-legs and a cluster...
Exactly, it was an allergic reaction, and a pretty severe one! Of course, the reaction might also be intense because the fish at concoction he prepared might not have been diluted at all...
Feeling a bit guilty, Garrett kept up a confident facade while clapping his hands. "Confird! It's the codfish's fault!"
"What's next?"
"Next..."
Garrett faltered.
After the skin test, the cause of the child's illness was identified as acute throat edema due to an allergy. He knew the ergency procedures like the back of his hand, could prescribe them with his eyes closed. Even before giving the instructions, the veteran ergency ward nurses had prepared the dications:
0.1% adrenaline hydrochloride subcutaneous injection;
10ml saline solution
1mg adrenaline
10mg dexathasone, imdiate oral rinsing for three to five minutes;
Followed by 20-40ml saline solution, 1-2mg adrenaline, and 10mg dexathasone for continuous nebulization.
But now, what did he have in his hands?
Absolutely nothing!
No adrenaline injection, no dexathasone injection, not even saline solutionwhatever they prepared on-site was definitely impure, with inaccurate concentration and far from sterile...
Boom!
This day was a disaster!
Fortunately, Garrett had a plan for this issue. Pretending to contemplate for a mont, he calmly turned to the farr:
"I saw there's mutton soup in the kitchen. Are the sheep's innards still there?"
"They are, they are!" Farr Edmund vigorously nodded. Garrett breathed a sigh of relief: if they weren't, he'd have to negotiate with the farmhands to slaughter a sheep on the spot. He got up and headed for the kitchen:
"Bring
the innards!"
Through this rescue operation, Garrett had gained significant respect at the farm. With just a word, soone was already on their way to fetch the requested items. Soon, a bloody basin of innards was brought in and slamd onto Garrett's table.
And there, amidst the crowd, Garrett squatted down, paying no mind to being watched, and unabashedly rummaged through the wooden basin...
anwhile, the priest, who had been following Garrett all along, crouched down curiously as well. After observing for a while, puzzled, he couldn't help but ask, "What are you doing?"
"Looking for a specific organ."
"Which one?"
The priest leaned in. Finally unable to hold back any longer, Sir Roman, who had been guarding them diligently, stepped forward, bowing:
"Sir, your status is noble, you shouldn't..."
"Hey!" The priest impatiently waved his sleeve. Stretching his neck left and right, he unexpectedly caught a whiff of a mixed, pungent sll, nearly staggering backward if not for Sir Roman's support. Yet, despite the discomfort, he continued his questioning:
"What are you looking for exactly? It's just innards; put them down, and they'll find it for you!"
"They don't know."
Garrett didn't lift his head, focused on his search, muttering, "Kidney... Kidney... Found it! There's one more..."
"Oh, you're looking for the sheep's kidneys!" The priest's head popped back in. Garrett raised his hand, stained with sheep's blood, as if to push him away:
"Stop bothering!"
A cold hum ca from the top left. Sir Roman unsheathed his sword, blocking Garrett's hand. With a chilling gleam, Garrett was taken aback, and the priest's head retreated, muttering:
"If you won't tell, fine... I was just trying to help..."
Ignoring him, Garrett remained focused, painstakingly searching in the wooden basin. The butchered sheep's anatomy was in complete disarray, finding one kidney didn't guarantee finding the other. He continued for a while longer, eventually uncovering both kidneys. Breathing a sigh of relief, he carried the bowl with the kidneys to the table and began ticulously dissecting them.
From the start, Garrett wasn't after the kidneys but the adrenal glands.
Adrenaline constricts blood vessels, while dexathasone acts as an anti-inflammatory and suppresses allergies. Dexathasone was a synthetic compound, out of the question now, but adrenaline... maybe there was a way.
With this substance, at least the throat swelling could be alleviated, allowing the child to breathe normally. As for the chicken bone stuck in the airway, it could also be removed quickly.
Theoretically, adrenaline belongs to the protein hormone category and can't be taken orally because stomach enzys break it down. However, history ntioned instances of oral adrenaline intake. Garrett recalled reading about it in a past life:
In the autumn of 1893, British doctor George Oliver, who invented the sphygmomanoter, discovered that when a subject swallowed a substance extracted from goat adrenal glands, the sphygmomanoter could detect radial artery constriction.
In later years, this experint beca the earliest significant evidence of adrenal extracts elevating blood pressure. But for Garrett at this mont, it signified sothing more important:
Adrenaline or adrenal extract taken orally did indeed work!
Of course, the child couldn't swallow right now. But Garrett had another hope: among the adrenaline family, adrenaline and noradrenaline couldn't be taken sublingually, but isoprenaline could! Therefore... adrenal extract... or rather, crushed adrenal gland mixed with water... might have so effect... right?
Garrett was too tense to speak, ticulously peeling the mbrane off the sheep's kidneys under the dim light. Snipping, pulling, bluntly separating... the rough iron scissors in his hand glimred softly, almost exhibiting the dexterity of surgical shears.
The adrenal gland was small, snugly situated at the top of the kidney, enveloped within the renal capsule. Human adrenal glands weighed rely 5-7 grams; goat adrenal glands wouldn't differ much. He had to be extrely careful to extract the adrenal gland intact without damaging it.
He didn't know how much active substance was in these two adrenal glands or how much could be absorbed sublingually. He... better be careful and not waste any...
Garrett was fully absorbed, his actions cautious and gentle. The atmosphere he exuded while working unknowingly affected everyone. Even the fussy priest stopped talking, leaning over the table, silent. The knight coughed beside him, attempting to say sothing, but Garrett waved his hand, silencing him.
Only when Garrett successfully extracted the two
adrenal glands, chopped and ground them in a clean empty bowl, mixed them with water for the child to rinse, did the priest heave a sigh of relief, jumping up and asking:
"Is this enough? Is it okay now?"
"Let's wait and see..."
Garrett stared intently at the child's neck, staying vigilant in case the chicken bone shifted. Thankfully, after the child rinsed for one minute, two minutes, five minutes... the chicken bone remained intact, but the throat swelling gradually subsided, and the sound of air passing through the vocal cords beca more pronounced.
"Wow! It worked! It really worked!"
"Yeah, it worked." Garrett wiped off a bead of sweat, pulled out the chicken bone, and smiled wearily at the priest, "Next, it's your turn to heal his wound..."
"No problem! Watch !"
The priest eagerly rushed over. After a night of turmoil with the child's condition, he finally had a chance to contribute. His healing technique was particularly neat and precise. Once the wound was healed, he straightened his robe, held his head high, and extended his right hand to Garrett:
"Hello, young healer."
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