“The truth about anaesthesia”
Anaesthesia is a medical operation that can’t be bypassed prior to surgery, but there is a little “sickness” in the case of anaesthesia, which is considered “to cause memory loss and affect brain flexibility”. So what’s anesthesia? Why do you have to do pre-surgery? What happened to our bodies in the anesthesia? Let’s find out the truth about the anesthesia. What’s anesthesia? Why pre-opaesthesia? In short, anaesthesia is a medical technique that allows the patient to feel pain or to reduce it to the degree that the body can withstand. The operation of anaesthesia is highly specialized and requires the responsibility of a professional anaesthetist, and almost all surgical operations require the full involvement of anaesthesiologist, including the pre-operative, mid- and post-optomy phase. At present, the more common anaesthesia programmes are divided into three main categories, namely, gills, wholesemics, complex anesthesia, etc. Among them is the local anesthesia of the surgical parts, which is applied mainly to simple, short-lived operations, such as mouth opening, stitching and eye-skin cutting. Insembly is an anaesthesia used by inhalation, veins, etc., where the drug acts as anaesthesia in the central nervous system. It applies to large-scale operations, such as pulmonary cancer root therapy, stomach cancer root therapy, cholesterectomy, etc., where the patient is unconscious and does not suffer from pain. The combination of anaesthesia, which is an anaesthesia that uses two types of anaesthesia simultaneously or sequentially, has the advantage of high anaesthesia quality, low cost, low adverse effects, etc., and is currently more common in clinical applications and applies to most operations. What happened to our bodies in the anesthesia? What do you need to do? Our consciousness is clear, and there may be an abnormal feeling of body fever, pain, electric shocks, etc. in anaesthesia, at which point no panic, no random movement, and a prompt feedback to the doctor, with the doctor to deal with it. In the event of a feeling of dizziness, panic, ringing, nausea, etc., a doctor is also required to be informed in a timely manner of his or her treatment. We’ll go through three main stages at the time, i.e. induction, maintenance, awakening. When induced, anaesthesia is normally injected through open veins, and we sleep within minutes, and in a few cases there may be a slight intoxication of pain in the part of the drug, caused by a brief anaesthesia, without fear. We’ve lost our sense of the outside world and won’t feel surgical pain. When we wake up, we will gradually regain consciousness, and when we wake up we may feel a bit of coughing and unable to say anything, because it is the result of a respiratory maintenance device such as a full-cut air pipe pipe, a larynx, etc., which can be mitigated for a short period of time after the operation, without fear. Does anaesthesia make brains stupid or affect memory? Many people are more concerned about the safety of anaesthesia, which affects memory or brain, but in practice, most of the current clinical applications of anaesthesia are relatively short-lived, after which the body is able to completely metabolize the anaesthesia within a short period of time, so that it does not affect memory for long periods or contributes to brain loss. There is also no evidence that anaesthesia can lead to the after-effects of infants and young children, except that the central nervous stage of the infant and young child is in the developmental stage, thus avoiding multiple and prolonged surgical anesthesia at the age of 3 years.