From this, it can be seen that Dr. Tan Shuilin is quite competent in both diagnosis and prescriptions.
However, after three days of treatment, the patient not only showed no significant improvement, but the blood urea nitrogen increased to 22 mmol/l.
Dr. Tan Shuilin realized something was wrong and quickly sought assistance from a senior physician.
The Urology Department indeed has experts, and after further diagnosis and examination of the patient, Director Zhang Zhongsheng from the Urology Department immediately sought help from Nephrology.
Speaking of the Nephrology and Urology Departments, one focuses on medical treatment and the other on surgical, but both deal with kidney issues.
The difference is that Urology specializes in solving kidney stones and ureteral strictures through minimally invasive procedures and surgeries.
Nephrology, on the other hand, excels in medication treatment.
In terms of diagnostic capability, internal medicine is somewhat stronger, naturally.
