Dai Nanhui and Geng Lingfei were momentarily stunned, searching their minds for the relevant knowledge point.
Perhaps it was because they were surgery students, they didn't pay much attention to such knowledge points. Diabetic patients are usually under the care of internal medicine, just like those with hypertension. When surgery becomes necessary, the symptoms of complications are very apparent—heart attacks, cerebral hemorrhage, cerebral infarction, or amputation due to diabetic foot, and those subtle daily changes are overlooked because saving the patient's life with surgery is the priority. Therefore, interns who regularly monitor the progression of patients with chronic diseases in internal medicine pay more attention to these details than surgeons do.
"Yingying," Kang Mingzhu called her junior. She felt a bit frustrated; they were supposed to be talented students, yet it seemed that because they were surgery students, they disdained internal medicine knowledge points.