Rebirth 1977 Great Era

Chapter 764: The Huge Collection of the He Family, Qi Yong, the Warehouse-Moving Rat

Chapter 764: The Huge Collection of the He Family, Qi Yong, the Warehouse-Moving Rat (Monthly Ticket Plus)
"Okay! No problem, no problem!" Although Qi Yong was desperate in his heart, he still had to show satisfaction on his face.

After all, he found this himself.

Then Fang Yan took the book handed to him by Qi Yong and took him into the inpatient building.

Then Fangyan called Luo Huichun and Xie Chunrong who were on duty today.

Let them follow Qi Yong to bring back the remaining books.

In fact, Fang Yan could have asked his three assistants to go, but after thinking about it, Fang Yan finally chose Luo Huichun and Xie Chunrong, who had official identities.

Luo Huichun is from the Hua Xia Chinese Medical Research Institute, Xie Chunrong is a fifth-year student at Capital University of Chinese Medicine, and their teacher is the current vice president Wang Yuchuan.

They are definitely more professional than the average person, and even if Qi Yong plays tricks, what they say will carry more weight.

This is what Fangyan thinks.

Then the two of them accompanied Qi Yong on the trip.

Judging from the posture of Fangyan, it seems that he is going to plagiarize Qi Yong's house.

After finishing the matter here, Fangyan started to check the house.

Two more people were able to be discharged from the hospital today.

After Fangyan completed the examination, he prescribed them some medicine for follow-up treatment and conditioning at home, and then let them go through the discharge procedures.

Next, Fangyan went to see the patients.

Before going to school, I was assigned to see patients here every morning.

However, there are not many difficult and complicated diseases among the people coming here now. Except for some individual diseases that require hospitalization, most of them are relatively easy to treat.

I don’t know if it’s because people in the outside world now know that he can treat pediatric diseases, and there are quite a few children here today.

One of them was sent here from the Pediatric Department of Peking Union Medical College Hospital, and they said Fangyan was asked to help with the consultation.

Seven or eight days ago, the sick child was found to be irritable and restless, unable to sleep well, easily frightened and panicked, had a fever, did not want to eat, was disgusted by greasy food, felt nauseous when he smelled oil, and even wanted to vomit. His urine was dark in color, like tea.

So we took the child to the hospital for examination, and found that the child's liver was enlarged. It could be felt about a finger's width below the ribs, and it was painful when pressed.

Subsequently, liver function tests were performed, and the results showed that the phospholipid flocculent test was three positive (+++), the thymol turbidity test result was 10 units, and the icterus index was 30 units, so he was diagnosed with acute icteric hepatitis.

The child was then admitted to the hospital, and the hospital used liver-protecting treatment methods to treat him.

They used glucuronosyl lactone, also known as liver tyler, vitamin C, etc., mainly to promote liver cell regeneration and detoxification.

This method seems a bit old-fashioned in Fangyan's opinion. It mainly aims to lower alanine aminotransferase and reduce jaundice with ursodeoxycholic acid, but the effect is definitely not very good, especially for acute jaundice.

So there has been no progress in the child's treatment during these seven or eight days. Now the Western medicine doctor is also thinking that since the dialects are so close and they are in the same hospital, and consultation is not a transfer, it would be a waste not to find someone.

Since he was originally a member of the guild, Fangyan certainly couldn't refuse him.

So I started to diagnose the patient.

The sick child is four years old.

The white part of the eye, that is, the sclera, is slightly yellowish, the tongue coating is yellow and slightly thick, and the pulse is thin and slightly rapid.

It is also accompanied by low fever, irritability, palpitations, nausea and retching, and poor appetite.

"Acute icteric hepatitis in Western medicine is caused by the accumulation of damp heat in the liver, gallbladder, spleen, and stomach in traditional Chinese medicine. The liver and gallbladder are hot and the spleen is damp. The treatment is to clear away heat and dampness, soothe the liver and strengthen the spleen. I will prescribe a prescription for you to try." After all, it was a consultation. Western medicine had already made a similar diagnosis. Fangyan only needed to verify whether the diagnosis was correct and then prescribe a prescription directly.

Then, Fangyan listed the prescription:
3 grams of Bupleurum, 9 grams of Artemisia capillaris, 6 grams of red bean, 1.5 grams of Gentiana scabra, 3 grams of Sophora flavescens, 3 grams of Gardenia jasminoides, 6 grams of Fructus Douchi, 6 grams of Citrus aurantium, 6 grams of Uncaria rhynchophylla, 6 grams of Atractylodes macrocephala, 3 grams of White Cardamom, 3 grams of Poria peel, 6 grams of Shenqu, and 1.5 grams of Juncus.

"Just go to the Chinese medicine pharmacy and get the medicine." Fangyan didn't say much. He was just a colleague asking for help.

The Western doctor immediately took the dialect prescription and took the child back to try it.

By the time Fangyan finished seeing patients and went home at noon, news had already come from the Western medicine department.

After taking a dose of medicine, the child's low fever has subsided, his body temperature has returned to normal, his irritability and palpitations have disappeared, and his nausea and dry retching have eased. However, he still doesn't want to eat, and his jaundice has not been eliminated.

They had been taking western medicine for seven or eight days but it didn't work. However, Fangyan saw an immediate improvement after taking one dose of medicine.

The Western medicine colleagues there were also amazed by Fang Yan's skills.

I just wrote down the recipe.

This will be used to facilitate the treatment of acute jaundice later.

Fangyan never expected that his Chinese medicine would actually begin to influence Western medicine.

In response to their current problem, Fangyan thought about it and asked them to remove Gardenia, Fermented Black Beans, and Uncaria Rhynchophylla from the original prescription, and add 6 grams of Cornus officinalis and three dates.

The Western doctor was very receptive and agreed immediately.

Then he went to pick up the medicine according to the prescription in dialect.

After they left, Fang Yan saw that it was almost lunch time, and Luo Huichun and Xie Chunrong had not returned yet.

Just when Fangyan was wondering, the phone at the nurses' station rang.

After the nurse on duty answered the phone, she said to Fang Yan:

"Director Fang, was it Doctor Luo who called back?"

"Luo Huichun?" Fang Yan asked.

"Yes." The nurse nodded and handed the microphone to Fang Yan with both hands.

Fangyan took the phone:

"Hey, Xiao Luo."

Luo Huichun's voice came from the other end of the phone:

"Brother Fang, there are a lot of medical records and books here. We have just sorted them out. You may need to send a car over to transport them away!"

Fangyan frowned:

"A car? Do you mean a sedan, a jeep, or a truck?"

"Truck, truck!" Luo Huichun said affirmatively on the phone.

"No, how many books approximately?" Fangyan asked in surprise.

Luo Huichun thought for a moment, then said:
"Um... probably the size of a wall of your study!" Fang Yan took a breath of cold air after hearing this. He thought to himself that he had underestimated this bastard Qi Yong.

He said:
"Okay, I got it. I'll call a taxi right away, and you guys can go home with me for dinner later."

"Okay." Luo Huichun responded.

Fangyan hung up the phone, and Zhang Yanchang and Yang Jingxiang came over and asked:

"Brother Fang, do you need help?"

Fangyan nodded:
"Yes, moving books and medical records."

……

Next, Fangyan went downstairs and went to the rehabilitation department to say hello to his wife, then went to the hospital logistics department and directly borrowed a truck.

Then he drove himself, called Lao Fan, Zhang Yanchang, and Yang Jingxiang, and headed towards Yanjing Hospital, which was directly under the Ministry of Health and where Qi Yong worked.

When they arrived at the family area of ​​the hospital, Fang Yan saw Xie Chunrong waiting at the door.

Fangyan drove into the residential area and was guided by Xie Chunrong to a detached villa.

After getting off the car, I saw Luo Huichun and Qi Yong walking out of the room.

As soon as they met, Qi Yong smiled awkwardly at Fang Yan and said:

"Director Fang, look, there are indeed too many things, and it's difficult to move them."

Fangyan was amused by this dog thing, and he also said happily:
"Haha... Director Qi is really... thoughtful. He actually preserved so many things over the years. It's really unexpected."

He walked in speaking in dialect.

When I entered the house, I saw a mountain of various books already packed and arranged in the living room.

He Xiu's medical records and the He family's collection of ancient books, not only include his grandfather's medical records, but also the He family's medical records from the Republic of China and the Qing Dynasty.

For example, "Records of He Shaoqing's Traveling Medicine" tells the story of He Shaoqing, who traveled around Nanjing to treat patients with a Taoist friend during the Republic of China period.

After Fangyan casually flipped through it, he found that it not only recorded He Shaoqing's own medical cases, but also the medical cases and methods of other friends in the world. This method was similar to the two "Five Poison Secrets" by Zhu Liangchun.

There are also some ancient Taoist medical books in dialects that have never been heard of, and there are many annotations of several generations of the He family.

People who came after him were shocked when they saw Fangyan. The preciousness of the book kept rising. No wonder Qi Yong was reluctant to take it out. Even if he himself couldn't understand it, he probably wanted to leave it to future generations.

The value inside is immeasurable.

Fang Yan resisted the urge to blow Qi Yong's head off and called out to Lao Fan and the others:

"move!"

After the order was given, several people started to move.

Fangyan also joined in, and soon he had moved the "small mountain" from Qi Yong's living room to the car outside.

After covering it with waterproof cloth, Fang Yan asked Luo Huichun:
"Are you sure you have checked everything?"

Luo Huichun nodded:

"We have searched the house. There should be no place for him to hide."

The dialect responded:

"Okay, you guys get in the car first, I'll go talk to Qi Yong."

Luo Huichun nodded, then climbed onto the truck bed and waited for Fang Yan to drive.

Fang Yan returned to the room and said to Qi Yong:

"Director Qi, have you got everything?"

Qi Yong nodded repeatedly:

"I've got it, I've got it!"

The dialect responded:

"Okay, then I'll ask Uncle Lin Shengyong to give it some advice this afternoon."

Qi Yong's face turned pale immediately, and he opened his mouth, hesitating as to what he wanted to say.

"Director Qi, have you remembered something again?" Fang Yan asked.

Qi Yong slapped his thigh:
"Ah, I almost forgot, there's something else that's not from ancient Chinese medicine books."

"Oh?" Fangyan raised his eyebrows.

Qi Yong said:

"These are all antiques that Master used to play with and admire. I wanted to keep them as a keepsake... but now I remember that it would be best to give them to Director Fang!"

As he said this, he hurried to the study and soon took out a bundle of scrolls.

After handing it to Fangyan, he walked back into the house.

When Fangyan opened the scroll, he saw that they were all calligraphy works that were given to his good friend, someone from the He family, by a Taoist priest of a certain name during the Ming and Qing dynasties. Although they were not famous, they were all antiques.

It can be seen that the He family had close contacts with these Taoists before.

Before I had time to look at each item carefully, Qi Yong came out again, and this time he took out things like inkstones and porcelain.

At first glance, they are all antiques from the Ming and Qing dynasties.

It should be the same as the previous things, which he stole at the speed of light after his grandfather He Xiu passed away.

Fangyan was really amused by this bastard.

The bastard is really good at hiding. I didn't want to deal with him at first, thinking that I could just let it go when he took it out, but now I really can't help it.

PS: After finishing this chapter, I still owe you 75000 words.

There's more in the afternoon.

(End of this chapter)

Tap the screen to use advanced tools Tip: You can use left and right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.

You'll Also Like