Chapter 489: Magic Version of a Sphygmomanoter!
Catching a spy was a huge success!
Having eliminated a thorn in his side, Garrett could happily continue exploring the booths. He pulled out a large amount of gold coins, purchased what amounted to half a ton of rubber balls (and arranged for a ton more for the following year), and bought a whole cartload of various plants and animals:
Small clusters of white flowers, soft-leaved branches, and the gray bark peeled from the trees, which, according to locals, was used to treat swamp fever;
Brightly colored frogs, from which extracts could be taken to cause paralysis or numbness;
Fist-sized brown fruits, hard as wood, filled with a bunch of bean-shaped seeds;
And the so-called "god flowers," capable of revolving around the sun, which had brown flower discs...
Of course, in the end, Garrett asked the Archmage to inquire about the owner of a long skirt, wondering if Seraina could try it on—if it fit, buying it would be ideal.
When he asked what adorned the skirt, the seller readily answered:
"Jewel beetles! Oh, they’re a local type of insect, very beautiful, known as ’the eyes of the rainbow.’ This skirt is embellished with their elytra, said to be a princess’s bridal gown, made by three hundred won over an entire year..."
"Ah! Take it away! Take it away!"
Miss Silver Dragon instinctively jumped back. Such beautiful decorations, made from insect carapaces! Those small, dirty things!
Imagining wearing the skirt felt like having insects crawling all over her body—she was disgusted!
Although she wasn’t afraid of these creatures—they could hardly harm her, at most they would face her dragon’s breath—she found it quite repulsive!
She moved too quickly, even knocking over a tea tray in front of her, spilling tea all over the table. Seraina didn’t care and turned to run away. Garrett apologized with a smile, his palms open. The seller, understanding, chuckled:
"Ah, normal for a young lady—"
After shaking hands and exchanging contact details, promising to keep in touch, the exhibition visit ended. Instead of returning to the hospital, Garrett hurried to the Mage Tower:
"Mr. Norwood! Mr. Norwood! I need your help!"
Mr. Norwood popped his head out from the lab. This transmutation wizard had prospered under Garrett’s guidance, successfully advancing to a fifth-level mage and was now ambitiously working toward the sixth level.
Having spent nearly a year in the Mage Tower, his hair had lessened its graying, his back was straighter, his walk was brisker, and his voice louder. He looked at Garrett with bright, enthusiastic eyes:
"Mr. Nordmark? What do you need?"
His boss had called!
A new project!
Ti to publish another paper!
Mr. Nordmark was very generous; the topics he threw out were major, and he usually only listed himself as a corresponding author, sotis not even that...
"Look at these rubbers!" Garrett summoned two enhanced, oversized Mage Hands, clapping them together. He slapped his spatial bag, spilling out a handful of rubber balls:
"Please help, treat these with sulfur to make airbags—about the size one can hold in a hand, connected to a tube, then to a long, thin air pouch..."
Garrett described the basic structure of the traditional rcury sphygmomanoter’s inflating part to Mr. Norwood. Mr. Norwood pinched a rubber ball and nodded:
"I know, treated with sulfur, there was a paper on it in ’The Philosopher’s Stone.’ Unfortunately, the results are bulky, and the long tubes and thin sheets are troubleso. We need to study more about what you need. When do you need it?"
"The sooner, the better...uh..."
Garrett’s voice trailed off. Though not a materials scientist, he knew the four great pitfalls of biochemical environntal materials—it wasn’t sothing that could be achieved so easily. Researchers had to strive, and as the boss, he needed to be patient.
Depending on a transmutation wizard with two apprentices to provide results the day after a request was made was expecting too much.
"It’s okay, I’ll do more tests myself." Mr. Norwood kindly took on the task:
"Boss, is sulfur enough? Do we need anything else? How much sulfur should be added? How did you see the Archmages handle it? Does it require heating?"
Garrett nearly ran away. When he was in the Dwarf Kingdom, he was the one who suggested ideas, and the transmutation Archmage handled them. He had observed the process—it involved sulfur flying around, rubber balls flying around, being kneaded, fused, stretched by an invisible hand...
And that was it. Then, all the spacers, seals, and
various items Garrett needed were made. No concerns about temperature control or material proportions.
Garrett had to figure it out himself. He counted off on his fingers:
"Not just sulfur, all kinds of sulfur compounds are worth trying;"
"The amount of sulfur...you can try anything from 1% to 40%, it seems like the rubber cos out different at different amounts;"
"Temperature...you can soak it in a solution of sulfide at room temperature, or do hot vulcanization... I’m not sure about the specific temperatures, but try in hot water, steam, hot air;"
"You could also try adding sothing else, like the nitrocellulose I was working on recently..."
Got it, the boss has ideas, unsure how to achieve them, and speaking of operational capability, that’s even more out of the question. Mr. Norwood nodded, taking the sack of rubber, and unfolding a large sheet of drafting paper:
"Let’s check the papers first!" he called to his apprentices:
"Angela, you check the papers! Barry, you go buy every rubber product on the market! Hurry!"
The two apprentices responded. One dashed out of the Mage Tower, summoned a magical horse, and charged toward the trade hall of the White Tower; the other hurried to the Mage Tower’s information hub to find Mr. MOSS and flip through the list of papers.
anwhile, Mr. Norwood himself, his palms rough and calloused but no longer cracking, began to scratch his head:
Oh, the combinations of different compounds, amounts, proportions, temperatures... how many could there be? At least a thousand?
He wondered if the boss would agree to hiring more apprentices...
No, the boss would definitely agree, he doesn’t care about that. The real question is whether Mr. Lynn would agree, and if the Mage Tower’s inco could sustain it.
You know, training a transmutation mage is purely a matter of piling up materials!
Mr. Norwood rolled up his sleeves, started planning experints, listing materials, organizing equipnt, getting ready to work. Seraina, curious, followed him in, looking left and right. After a while, not understanding much, she turned back to ask Garrett:
"Garrett, what are you having him do? What is this for?"
She shook out the design schematics with a rustle. Garrett was up to sothing new again! Leaving himself in the hospital, spending so long at the mountain peak, he finally ca up with sothing new!
"This... oh, it’s a blood pressure gauge." Garrett, fully engrossed, was dissecting a dog’s chest wall and only glanced back after a while, sowhat absentmindedly throwing out a na before returning his attention to the surgery:
All the blood samples were stored in the Tower of the Sleepless. He didn’t want to draw blood one by one in his own Mage Tower, trying to match and test blood types, and then use [Bloodline Identification] to draw signal diagrams. He had no choice but to pick up the half-finished experints from his ti in the hospital:
Creating a model of a dog’s patent ductus arteriosus.
Thanks to the Rabies Research Institute, the council had captured a bunch of rabid dogs, and naturally, a bunch of normal stray dogs as well. Garrett, as the hospital’s owner and leading the project, easily borrowed two dogs to create animal models, no problem at all.
Unfortunately, all the previous experints had failed.
Hopefully, this ti would be successful. Garrett’s hands steadily cut through the dog’s skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscles, used a thoracotomy spreader to open the ribs, cut along the vagus nerve to open the upper end of the pericardium, exposing the pulmonary artery...
Seraina stood by, hardly daring to breathe, consciously staying further away and donning a mask. After a while, seeing Garrett finish separating the two blood vessels and taking a break, she seized the mont to ask:
"What is blood pressure?"
"It’s the pressure of the blood." Garrett pointed at the now exposed yellow dog’s jugular vein, considering how long to cut it. At Seraina’s question, he pointed at the cut-open diastinal pleura already revealing the descending aorta:
"When the heart beats, it puts a lot of pressure on the blood, shooting it into the arteries. The arteries then contract in segnts to provide pressure to deliver the blood throughout the body. I’m making this device to asure the pressure of the blood."
Seraina conjured an Arcane Eye, focusing on the slightly pulsating blood vessel, her curiosity mixed with nervousness. Garrett pointed at that section of the artery:
"If you insert a tube inside, connected to a vertical glass tube, you’ll see the blood shooting up—how high it goes indicates how high the blood pressure is. But then you might need a glass tube two to three ters high..."
Garrett’s lips curled into a slight smile. A blood pressure of 130
milliters of rcury is equivalent to 1767 milliters of water column, or about 1.7 ters. If unfortunately, this patient’s blood pressure went up to 230 milliters of rcury, then the glass tube would need to be over 3 ters high.
Such a tall glass tube, let alone the hassle—too narrow, and just the capillary action might suck the blood up; too wide, like a tube 1 square centiter in diater, and a single surge could an 170 to 300 milliliters of blood. All that blood shooting out, how would you stuff it back into the blood vessels?
...Speaking of which, that doctor who first asured animal blood pressure, he drew blood 270 centiters high from a horse’s carotid artery, did he ever get it back in?
"If you don’t want such a high glass tube, you’d use a U-shaped tube, put rcury on the other end. But rcury is troubleso, highly toxic, it’s best not to use invasive thods..."
"Why not use magic then?"
Garrett was taken aback. Seraina pointed at the pulsating blood vessel, her pale fingertip gently pressing down as if touching the gushing column of blood, feeling its pressure:
"Can’t you just insert a tube directly into the blood vessel, connect the other end to a magic array—displaying the pressure directly through the magic array?"
Garrett: ???
Well done, girl, you’ve spontaneously co up with invasive blood pressure monitoring?
That’s not a bad idea, I’ll ask around later if there’s a magic array that directly displays pressure...
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