My Sweet Physician Wife Calls The Shots

Chapter 1745 - A Pancreatic Cancer Patient



Chapter 1745 - A Pancreatic Cancer Patient

Chapter 1745: A Pancreatic Cancer Patient

“Ask me anything,” Nuannuan said boldly.

“You told boss to tell me that my body will change. I just want to ask, will I have the same abilities that boss has?”

“In your dreams!”

Nuannuan’s words were as cold as ice, which stunned Ning Wenhao.

“Your supernatural ability is far below the level of Big Brother Chi Yang’s. You only have his blood combined with the medicine that gives you just a tinge of his abilities. Therefore, your supernatural ability can’t be compared to his. However, if you persist in practicing, the medicine enhances the growth of the supernatural cells in your body. In other words, as long as you’re willing to work hard, your abilities will gradually improve.”

Ning Wenhao, who had been thoroughly shocked by Nangong Nuannuan’s “In your dreams!” statement, suddenly roared when he heard what Nangong Nuannuan said.

Nuannuan did not expect that he would suddenly roar. She was so scared she had dropped her phone, and it fell to the ground.

Seeing that his sworn brother had gone crazy, Chi Yang immediately snatched the phone from Ning Wenhao’s hand in displeasure. He kicked his butt and roared mercilessly—

“Get lost!”

“Good, good, good! Ahahahaha... Boss, Sister-in-law, I hope you love each other and maintain your loving relationship until the end of time! Thank you, Sister-in-law!”

Ning Wenhao was so happy that he left the headquarters and ran to the field as if he had gone mad.

He was ready to bring a pack of wolf pups over to accompany him in his practice drills.

It did not take long before the peaceful days ended.

About half a month had passed since the patient who could not be treated passed from his lung infection.

Nuannuan first went to her drug base to check up on Huang Zichu’s recovery before heading to the military hospital.

Today, a surgery for pancreatic cancer would take place in the military hospital.

Pancreatic cancer was known as the king of cancers. If anyone were to be diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, even if it was detected at an early stage, the patients would only have a 5% chance of surviving a mere 5 years after the surgery.

The patient with pancreatic cancer who was undergoing the operation today was in the middle stage of his illness. At first, he dismissed it as gastric pain. Later, when his stomach affected the right upper costal nerve and caused pain, he suspected that he had gallstones.

His previous examination showed evidence of small stones in his gallbladder. Thus, the patient was only prescribed a few drugs to clear his liver and strengthen his gallbladder.

However, the intensity of the pain continued to increase. Eventually, it became unbearable—so he rushed to the hospital to have an ultrasound examination.

The results showed that his bile duct and pancreas were inflamed. The doctors suspected that he had a case of chronic pancreatitis.

He was transferred to the pancreatic department to carry out a blood test. The blood test was originally meant to provide more details of his condition so he could be appropriately treated for chronic pancreatitis. However, the blood test, which included a CA199 cancer screening, showed that the blood test index was 2000 times higher than normal. It was finally identified to be pancreatic cancer.

The patient originally did not want to go through the surgery. He thought that it would be useless to undergo surgery since he had the king of cancer, pancreatic cancer. Especially for a middle-stage pancreatic cancer patient like him, the chances of survival were extremely small.

However, to make his family feel better, the patient ultimately agreed to undergo surgery.

There were major organs closely surrounding the pancreas, such as the gallbladder, bile duct, liver, spleen, lung, and stomach. Moreover, they were easy targets for cancer cells to metastasize to.

When the doctor cut open the patient’s body to reveal his internal organs, he discovered that other than the gallbladder, liver, spleen, lung, and stomach, which had already shown varying degrees of metastases, the cancer cells had already metastasized to the large intestine.

With the trust that the patient’s family had put in him, the doctor made an incision about 50 centimeters long on the patient’s body. They had to do something, so they ended up operating on the patient’s lungs, spleen, stomach, bile, pancreas, and large intestine—everything except the heart.


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