Here are some other frequently asked questions (FAQs) that patients have asked their anesthesiologist about receiving anesthesia and avoiding risks. Always consult your doctor about any questions or concerns you may have regarding medical treatment. This information should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice.
1. Are there different kinds of anesthesia?
2. What are the risks of anesthesia?
3. What about eating or drinking before my anesthesia?
4. Should I take my usual medicines?
5. Could herbal medicines and other dietary supplements affect my anesthesia if I need
surgery?
6. What makes office-based anesthesia different?
7. How is the epidural block performed for labor and delivery?
Excerpt
from the Anesthesia and You section of the ASA Web site
www.asahq.org/patientEducation/anesandyou.htm
Q:
Are there different kinds of anesthesia?
A:
There are three main categories of anesthesia: local, regional, and
general. Each has many forms and uses.
In
local anesthesia, the anesthetic drug is usually injected into
the tissue to numb just the specific location of your body requiring
minor surgery, for example, on the hand or foot.
In
regional anesthesia, your anesthesiologist makes an injection
near a cluster of nerves to numb the area of your body that requires
surgery. You may remain awake, or you may be given a sedative. You do
not see or feel the actual surgery take place. There are several kinds
of regional anesthesia. Two of the most frequently used are spinal
anesthesia and epidural anesthesia, which are produced by injections
made with great exactness in the appropriate areas of the back. They
are frequently preferred for childbirth and prostate surgery.
In
general anesthesia, you are unconscious and have no awareness
or other sensations. There are a number of general anesthetic drugs.
Some are gases or vapors inhaled through a breathing mask or tube and
others are medications introduced through a vein. During anesthesia,
you are carefully monitored, controlled and treated by your
anesthesiologist, who uses sophisticated equipment to track all your
major bodily functions. A breathing tube may be inserted through your
mouth and frequently into the windpipe to maintain proper breathing
during this period. The length and level of anesthesia is calculated
and constantly adjusted with great precision. At the conclusion of
surgery, your anesthesiologist will reverse the process and you will
regain awareness in the recovery room.
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Q:
What are the risks of anesthesia?
A:
All operations and all anesthesia have some risks, and they are
dependent upon many factors including the type of surgery and the
medical condition of the patient. Fortunately, adverse events are very
rare. Your anesthesiologist takes precautions to prevent an accident
from occurring just as you do when driving a car or crossing the
street.
The
specific risks of anesthesia vary with the particular procedure and
the condition of the patient. You should ask your anesthesiologist
about any risks that may be associated with your anesthesia.
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Excerpt from the Anesthesia for Ambulatory
Surgery brochure
www.asahq.org/patientEducation/ambulatoryAnes.pdf
Q:
What about eating or drinking before my anesthesia?
A:
As a general rule, you should not eat or drink anything after midnight
before your surgery. Under some circumstances, you may be given
permission by your anesthesiologist to drink clear liquids up to a few
hours before your anesthesia.
Q:
Should I take my usual medicines?
A:
Some medications should be taken and others should not. It is
important to discuss this with your anesthesiologists. Do not
interrupt medications unless your anesthesiologist or surgeon
recommends it.
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Excerpt from the Herbal and Dietary
Supplement brochure
www.asahq.org/patientEducation/herbPatient.pdf
Q:
Could herbal medicines and other dietary supplements affect my
anesthesia if I need surgery?
A:
Anesthesiologists are conducting research to determine exactly how
certain herbs and dietary supplements interact with certain
anesthetics. They are finding that certain herbal medicines may
prolong the effects of anesthesia. Others may increase the risks of
bleeding or raise blood pressure. Some effects may be subtle and less
critical, but for anesthesiologists anticipating a possible reaction
is better than reacting to an unexpected condition. So it is very
important to tell your doctor about everything you take before
surgery.
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Excerpt from the Office-Based Anesthesia
and Surgery section of the ASA Web site
www.asahq.org/patientEducation/officebased.htm
Q:
What makes office-based anesthesia different?
A:
There is one fundamental and very important difference between
office-based anesthesia and receiving anesthesia in a hospital or
ambulatory surgical center. The strict, well-defined standards and
regulations that keep surgery and anesthesia very safe in hospitals
and ambulatory surgical centers do not uniformly apply to physicians
offices in the United States.
Excerpt from the Planning Your Childbirth
brochure
www.asahq.org/patientEducation/childbirth.pdf
Q:
How is the epidural block performed for labor and delivery?
A:
An epidural block is given in the lower back. You will either be
sitting up or lying on your side. The block is administered below the
level of the spinal cord. The anesthesiologist will use a local
anesthesia to numb an area of your lower back. A special needle is
placed in the epidural space just outside the spinal sac.
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