Font Size
15px

As a top special forces soldier.

Lin Ziming naturally learned so dical skills.

After all, when performing tasks in the field, you can’t always have the perfect 25-degree temperature.

Ice and snow, deserts, and gobi are the norm.

Therefore, every special warrior has a bit of various tech trees.

These dical skills include both traditional Chinese dicine and Western dicine, and the practical level may not necessarily be comparable to an ordinary outpatient doctor.

But they have considerable judgnt in terms of acute symptoms.

Therefore, through Red Dragon’s description,

Three possibilities instinctively appeared in Lin Ziming’s mind:

Diarrhea, colon cancer, dysentery.

And as Red Dragon said.

Tian Jue is a commonly high mortality disease behind the entire Celestial Moon Mountain Range, so he quickly ruled out the first two possibilities.

Thus, the answer was left with only one:

Dysentery.

When it cos to dysentery, the first point to ntion.

Is that dysentery and malaria are not the sa, many people tend to confuse them.

Malaria is a mosquito-borne disease, although it also cos with diarrhea, it generally doesn’t present symptoms of pus and blood.

Dysentery is even more terrifying than malaria.

In ancient tis and even in so underdeveloped areas today, dysentery is an infectious disease at the level of infant night cries, deadly upon contact.

For example, Chen Lin, who cured Cao Cao’s headache, and the renowned Su Shi, both died of dysentery.

There is even one historical event that hasn’t been verified by historians but matches the tiline well, which is the renowned Three Kingdoms Great Plague.

At that ti, including Chen Lin, five of the Jian An Seven Scholars were wiped out, followed by Lu Su and others.

Although except for Chen Lin, who was recorded dying of dysentery, the historical records for others’ deaths are described as ’great epidemic of that year’.

But looking at the tiline, the possibility of dysentery is actually very high.

Besides dostically, not to ntion the West.

Countless Western ancient kings died of diseases like dysentery, leading to the collapse of already short reigns.

In the histories of many civilizations.

Only post-Christian era Huaxia and Egypt explicitly had treatnt thods for dysentery.

The credit in Huaxia belongs without a doubt.

80% of the cures for ancient diseases are thanks to Zhang Zhongjing’s "Treatise on Cold Damage and Miscellaneous Diseases".

The redy Zhang Zhongjing sumd up is Bai Tou Weng Tang, proven by modern dicine to have significant effects against amoebic pathogens and trichomonas. (Attached DOI: 10.2991/be-15.2015.179, University of Copenhagen dical Laboratory Report)

Bacterial dysentery falls under the category of amoebic dysentery.

Aside from Huaxia.

Egypt’s thods are more physical:

Isn’t dysentery occurring in the intestines? Then we wash the intestines.

Like killing all the enemies being counted as stealth.

If you clear everything from your intestines, naturally there would be no bacteria.

Egyptian physicians would have patients drink a concoction mainly from dried coriander fruit powder, to relax cramps and cleanse the intestines.

The enema agent used was made by mixing honey, fernted adhesive, sweet beer, and salt.

The tool used was sothing similar to a copper horn, with the thinner end shaped like a bird’s beak.

The subsequent scenes are indescribable, everyone can imagine for themselves.

However, none of the thods above are 100% effective for dysentery.

According to historical records, the actual success rate is around 60%.

Sotis even lower.

But even this proportion was an unimaginable miracle in ancient tis.

Returning to the tent.

Upon hearing Lin Ziming’s soft murmurs—for the loud-voiced primitive people it was indeed a soft murmur, Red Dragon was imdiately drawn to it:

"What’s up, Steward Lin, you know about Tian Jue too?

If I’m not mistaken, Tian Jue is rare in the central domain, right?"

Lin Ziming smiled at him and said:

"Commander Red Dragon, you are mistaken.

Your side might not be aware that my descendants in Chixian City have been practicing dicine for generations, with all kinds of difficult and rare cases recorded, called the "Barefoot Doctor’s Handbook".

From a pathological perspective.

Tian Jue seems to be sothing we are familiar with, and we already have a highly effective and not too ex... cough, a not very expensive treatnt thod for this disease."

Red Dragon’s eyes imdiately widened:

"Really? The central domain can use ordinary ans to cure Tian Jue?"

Seeing Red Dragon a bit excited, Lin Ziming thought carefully and added:

If Tian Jue is dysentery, then it’s certainly no problem.

However, our specialist physicians need to have a look at this brother’s condition for a final conclusion.

Upon hearing this, Red Dragon couldn’t help but anxiously ask:

"Steward Lin, may I ask if the physician you ntioned is available now? Could he co over?"

Whether it was Master Tian’s translation issue or Red Dragon’s own attitude change, Red Dragon’s title unusually changed to ’you’ this ti.

Seeing Red Dragon sowhat agitated, Lin Ziming quickly consoled him:

"Commander Red Dragon, don’t worry, leave this to .

If nothing goes wrong, the physician will arrive soon."

After saying this, Lin Ziming hurriedly bid farewell and returned to Chixian City.

Half an hour later.

He returned with the dical staff prepped by the command center through recorders.

This ti the person carrying out the inspection task was Bao Xin, the director of Modu First People’s Hospital, also one of the important people who first arrived at the Damo Realm with the team.

However, due to certain irresistible reasons, so of Bao Xin’s research projects were relatively low-profile.

So in the past period, his presence wasn’t very strong.

However, presence and ability are two different things.

Although Bao Xin isn’t at the level of an academician, he is at least the head of the Modu Health Expert Team, even considered an "Imperial Physician".

Therefore his skill level is needless to say.

In a certain sense.

The barbarian who fell ill could be considered rather fortunate, having managed to secure a rare expert number.

Of course.

The fortunate precondition is that he himself didn’t fall first.

.........

Upon arriving at the camp.

Bao Xin, wearing protective gear, first led the team to handle the site, and soon the scent of 84 disinfectant filled the surroundings of the tent.

Once everything was ready.

Bao Xin, with a ’this tm is the central domain’s style?’ face, along with Red Dragon and Shi Yin entered the tent.

Lin Ziming and Wang Qiang stayed outside the tent to wait.

After all, experts have their specialization, and their presence inside would have no use other than taking up space.

With nothing to do, these two simply pulled out their phones and started playing Sudoku on the camp’s local network.

After about two hours, finally there was movent from inside the tent.

Only to see Bao Xin erge alone, his face and neck visibly marked by pressure lines from the mask.

Bao Xin, indifferent to these, smiled and said to Lin Ziming:

"Colonel Lin, mission accomplished, the patient inside nad Gu Tong indeed has dysentery.

Specifically categorized as bacterial dysentery, also known as shigellosis.

However, his symptoms were already at a critical level, close to shock and dentia.

Therefore, we perford a significant surgery on him, and administered fluid replenishnt salts and levofloxacin, we just need to wait for recovery."

....

You are reading Transmigrator's Guide to Conquering Another World Chapter 394 - 373: Tien Fern (Part 2) on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.