webnovel

My Wife Is A Miracle Doctor In The 80s

The newly published "Rebirth of the Noble Lady: The Wife in Marquess House" tells the story of her past life where her mother remarried, and she became a common cabbage. While her sister got meat, she was left with soup; her sister got noodles, she had to make do with water; her sister was the princess, and she was labeled as trash. She was trapped in a life fully planned by that mother-daughter pair for her; her family, her husband, all reduced to a miserable joke. Then a car accident turned her into a bloody mess. She told him, 'my money all goes to my father, my kidney to you, because you are a good man.' At the age of thirty-three, she died in a car accident, leaving her kidney to a good man. At three, she was reborn. In this life, faced with manipulation, she fought back. What sister? She didn’t even have a biological mother, where would she get a sister from? And in this life, she didn't know if she would once again encounter that good man...

Summer Dye Snow · Ciudad
Sin suficientes valoraciones
1050 Chs

Chapter 715: She Heals Her Own Arm

```

Now that they'd been born, they were premature twins.

The duty doctor didn't wait any longer, calling over a nurse to first help Tang Yuxin stabilize her arm.

Actually, he truly admired Tang Yuxin at that moment, after all, she was enduring the pain meant for two. Giving birth was already unimaginably painful, let alone the excruciating torment of a broken bone, but Tang Yuxin was enduring both at the same time.

Combined, these two types of pain were enough to kill her.

He had never seen any patient endure such pain; it was almost beyond what a person could bear.

The doctor began to inject Tang Yuxin with oxytocin, while the nurse held down her arm firmly, afraid that any movement might result in further injury.

Tang Yuxin had never given birth before, but as a doctor herself, she'd seen many women go through labor, knowing only their immense pain, sometimes heart-wrenchingly so. Yet, only when she truly experienced it herself did she grasp the full extent of such pain.