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In fact, during the two and a half years when we were in school, we learned to use an electrocardiogram machine to do an electrocardiogram, and we learned it more than once, but the teachers of the three courses taught different things.
It's just that when we were in physiology class, the physiology teacher taught us to use an old-fashioned electrocardiogram machine that can directly print the results.
And the electrocardiogram machine I saw for the first time in the Department of Gastroenterology is a kind of electrocardiogram machine that is more convenient to move, is directly connected to a computer, and needs to be sent to a doctor who specializes in electrocardiograms.
And that kind of old-fashioned electrocardiogram machine, I actually saw it in the cardiology department later.
Perhaps because most of the patients in the Department of Cardiology have problems with their hearts and great blood vessels (maybe it should be said that there are problems with blood vessels and hearts), the doctors chose the machine that can directly print out the waveform after doing an electrocardiogram (it is precisely this point. , I guess every doctor in the cardiology department must be better at reading ECG waveforms than other departments.)
Perhaps because of this, the electrocardiograph commonly used in other departments had to be left idle.
Insert a few paragraphs:
When I was working in the cardiology department, I could always hear the teachers talking about sinus rhythm, atrial fibrillation, ventricular fibrillation, these medical terms.
Although I know what atrial fibrillation and ventricular fibrillation are, at that time I just didn't know what sinus rhythm meant.
I have been thinking about it for a long time, but I still don't understand it.
But in the past few days, I was working in gastrointestinal surgery "2021-1-11 and I transferred to a new department - gastrointestinal surgery". When I followed the teacher's shift, my new teacher woke me up!
It turns out that sinus rhythm is caused by impulses from the sinoatrial node. To put it simply, it is a normal heart rhythm.
After figuring this out, I blame myself for being so stupid that I don't even know what sinus rhythm is!
And when I didn't know about it in the cardiology department, why didn't I ask the teacher?
At that time, what was going on in my mind?
I really don't know what to say about myself
After writing here, I want to intersperse with some other things:
As I mentioned earlier, the Department of Gastroenterology generally admits and treats patients in the afternoon.
In the Department of Gastroenterology, every newly admitted patient has to check blood sugar and do an electrocardiogram.
So in the afternoon, other interns and I always had to push the electrocardiogram machine around in the ward to do electrocardiograms for newly admitted patients.
But when I was in the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, although I stayed there for five weeks, I didn't even give a patient an EKG.
It is also because in the Department of Cardiology, doctors usually do ECG for patients. Even if some patients feel uncomfortable during the night shift, they are all done by the tutor, and it is not my turn at all.
Although my teacher has also taught me how to use that machine to do an electrocardiogram several times, but there is no actual manual operation, no matter how many times I read it, it is useless. After all, what I learned by doing it once by myself is better than watching it ten times. There are even more things to come.
I have always felt a bit regretful that I didn't learn to use that old-fashioned electrocardiogram machine, after all, it's too many skills to overwhelm me!
Then turn the topic back to gastroenterology.
I still remember the first time I did an electrocardiogram for a newly admitted patient. It was brought by a fellow student.
Whether it is a visiting student or an intern, whatever they teach me, the number of times they teach me is not much, and I will let me do it myself.
Although the operation of doing an electrocardiogram is not invasive at all, there is no need to worry too much about harming the patient.
But when I was doing the electrocardiogram under the watchful eyes of other interns, I was still quite nervous. (Remember the site URL: www.hlnovel.com