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During surgery, you will be given some form
of anesthesia - medication administered for the
relief of pain and sensation during surgery. The
type and dosage of anesthesia is determined by
the anesthesiologist. When a patient faces surgery,
he or she will meet with the anesthesiologist
or nurse anesthetist before the procedure. The
anesthesiologist will review the patient's medical
condition and history to plan the appropriate
anesthetic for surgery.
There are various forms of anesthesia. The type
of anesthesia you will receive will depend on
the type of surgery and your medical condition.
Usually, an anesthesiologist will administer a
sedative in addition to the anesthetic. The different
types of anesthesia include the following:
- Local Anesthesia — an anesthetic agent given
to temporarily stop the sense of pain in a particular
area of the body. A patient remains conscious
during a local anesthetic. For minor surgery,
a local anesthetic can be administered via injection
to the site. However, when a large area needs
to be numbed, or if a local anesthetic injection
will not penetrate deep enough, physicians may use
regional anesthetics.
- Regional Anesthesia — used to numb
only the portion of the body that will undergo
surgery. Usually an injection of local anesthetic
is given in the area of nerves that provide feeling
to that part of the body. There are different
forms of regional anesthetics, including:
- - a spinal athestheic is
used for lower abdominal, pelvic, rectal, or
lower extremity surgery. This type of anesthetic
involves injecting a single dose of the anesthetic
medication into the subarachnoid space, which
surrounds the spinal cord. The injection is
made into the lower back, below the end of the
spinal cord, and causes numbness in the lower
body. In some situations, such as a prolonged
procedure, continuous spinal anesthesia may
be used. A thin catheter (hollow tube) is left
in place in the subarachnoid space for additional
injections of the anesthetic agent, which ensures
numbness during the length of the procedure.
- - the epidural anesthetic
is similar to a spinal anesthetic and is commonly
used for surgery of the lower limbs and during
labor and childbirth. This type of anesthesia
involves continually infusing an anesthetic
medication through a thin catheter (hollow tube).
The catheter is placed into the space that
surrounds the spinal cord in the lower back
(just outside the subarachnoid space), causing
numbness in the lower body. Epidural anesthesia
may also be used for chest surgical procedures.
In this case, the anesthetic medication is injected
at a higher location in the back to numb the
chest and abdominal areas.
- General Anesthesia - an anesthetic used to
induce unconsciousness during surgery. The medication
is either inhaled through a breathing mask or
tube, or administered through an intravenous
line (a thin plastic tube inserted into a vein,
usually in the patient's forearm). A breathing
tube may be inserted into the windpipe to maintain
proper breathing during surgery. Once the surgery
is complete, the anesthesiologist ceases the
anesthetic and the patient wakes up in the recovery
room.
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The Department of Anesthesiology
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