Chapter 202 Xin Er Faints While Moving into the New Home (2)_1
Even though Doctor Gui had never performed such a peculiar surgery, as a physician dedicated to honing his medical skills, his learning ability was directly proportional to his thirst for knowledge. Guided by Mo Yan’s theoretical direction, he quickly got the hang of it and his hands became increasingly adept.
As the flesh of the Red Python was cut open, a great deal of blood flowed out. Mo Yan, holding a piece of gauze, wiped it off, the strong stench of blood making her uncomfortable.
But she had to stay and watch; if Doctor Gui accidentally cut a blood vessel, she could immediately use the Spirit Spring Water for remedy.
Fortunately, everything went smoothly, and there were no such accidents. Although the Red Python was fully paralyzed, its body still twitched slightly under the stimulation of pain, clearly in extreme agony.
The Red Python shamefully shed tears from the pain, dripping onto the ground.
Woo woo, it hurts, it hurts to death, once it recovers, it will definitely make that human compensate it well, woo woo!
Once they cut open the soft mucous membrane layer, the Red Python’s dark green gallbladder appeared before their eyes. The creature was large and so was its gallbladder, terrifyingly so, filled with at least a pound of bile.
Doctor Gui was delighted, and with Mo Yan’s suggested location, he steadily inserted the needle into the Red Python’s gallbladder. Soon, the bile flowed through the needle into the chicken intestine, then through the jade tube, and finally into the jade bowl that was prepared beforehand.
After about half a bowl of bile had flowed out, Doctor Gui estimated that it was enough and removed the needle, a trickle of dark green bile oozing from the puncture.
Mo Yan quickly dabbed it with a cotton cloth soaked in Spirit Spring Water until no more bile came out, then she allowed Doctor Gui to sew up the wound with a catgut suture.
The catgut suture, made from sheep intestines, would fuse with the Red Python’s flesh and blood once the wound healed, negating the need for stitch removal.
