Chapter 243 239. Schr?dinger's Life and Death and Antidote(2/2)
"You were not sent back to Vienna?"
"I caught a fever on the march, and the doctor said I should be sent to the Central Hospital. The Central Hospital is located in Muchen, and I have been there." Adams sighed, "I didn't expect that before the illness was over, there was news from the front line.
News of the defeat of the battle."
"Now you've followed them here again."
"Yes, I arrived the day before yesterday. My body temperature had not gone down yet and I was caught in the rain. My mental state was not very good." When Adams said this, his face became ferocious again, "Probably because I was in a coma for a day.
After a one-night relationship, the doctor diagnosed her as 'dead of illness'."
"Fortunately, you woke up." Kawei lifted up his somewhat smelly shirt, carefully touched his liver and spleen, then looked at the skin of his torso, and already came to the conclusion, "Are there many people like you in your army?
Such a patient?"
Adams didn't know how to answer this question, because the army seemed healthy before he fell ill: "I don't know either."
"Then let me change the question." Kawei stood up and asked, "Are there many rats in the barracks?"
"Rat is a specialty in every barracks dormitory. How could it not be there?" Adams smiled bitterly, "I would have rats crawling on my head when I was sleeping in the ward. They were not trying to bite me, they were just looking for something to eat."
"No bathing, there are rats, and the symptoms include high fever, chills, hepatosplenomegaly, and body pain." Kawei pointed to several spots of pigmentation on his torso, "It should be typhus, these are all things that have happened in the past."
Evidence of rash."
Typhus is not a strange disease. It was very common in the 19th century. Every doctor should learn from it. In fact, there were many typhus patients in the Municipal General Hospital. When Carvey was writing "The Thermometer"
The paper also cited medical records of typhus patients.
"Your rashes appear less often, and the progression of the disease seems a bit strange." Kawei explained, "But it should be gone now."
Chapter completed!