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What Is General Anaesthetic Like, What If It Doesn’t Work?
Has anyone had one?
I have one booked it's a while off yet but I'm apprehensive as I tend to have abnormal reactions to things.
I am very hyper alert, take hours to get to sleep. I'm also very strong willed and quite physically fit I can't imagine just being knocked out easily by some drug.
What is it like and what if it doesn't work?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The anaesthetist will constantly be checking your vital signs to ensure that everything is going as planned. (It takes a minimum of 14 years, after first getting top A-level grades, to become a fully-qualified anaesthetist. So he or she will definitely know their job!). The drug will work!
It's all incredibly simple. The drug (or, more accurately, a cocktail of drugs) will be fed into a vein through a cannula, probably in the back of your hand. Before you even have time to say 'Good night', you'll be unconscious. Then, apparently immediately afterwards, you'll simly wake up from a deep sleep. (A very few people might experience some nausea or mental confusion but, with modern drugs, that's actually quite rare. I felt ready to get up and dance within seconds of waking!).
They've always worked fine. Pre-hip replacement 1st time, they had run out of 'materiaux' for last minute X-rays at Poitiers so I didn't get pre-op the next early morning. Instead I was trolleyed down to X-ray and then trolleyed up to Theatre (clutching my new X-rays); transferred to surgical couch and was chatting to the 2 nurses about their shopping lists before the anaesthetist arrived.
'Bonjour Madame, ca va?' I managed to count to 6..........
I've now had 3 'Generals' and not got past counting to 6.
Don't worry. I do remember waking up and thinking 'I'm alive'.
I had a hernia op 3months ago, just like you I was a tad nervous/ terrified!
On the day of the op, they gave me pre-meds, then whilst still in bed, pushed me into another room, got me to sit up, all the time distracting me with small talk, next thing I knew a nurse walked behind me with a needle, the next thing I was waking up in bed with my wife by my bedside.
/// I remember saying f*off either inside my head or out loud. ///
One of the favourite occupations of the nursing staff is to inform you that while you were coming round in the recovery room you were using the most foul language they had ever heard. Or otherwise they taunt you with episodes of your life which you allegedly related on the same occasion. I still don't know whether they were kidding 😁
I've just been counting how many ops I have had since aged 9. I've recalled 10, one being long and complicated.there have neve r been problems with general anaesthetics. Except I came round last time with a black eye! The anaesthetist came to apologise. One of the nurses had knocked into a stand holding a drip and it fell down on my head!!
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