it is just like falling asleep. you fall asleep fast...real fast. nothing to be scared of. waking up affects everyone differently. some people wake up and feel fine, some wake up and dont feel real well. just dont make the mistake of trying to wake up fast. lay there and just rest....sleep more if you feel like it.
2007-09-04 03:43:21
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answer #1
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answered by yesiamalesbian 4
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No worries. I've had a couple of procedures and have "gone under" as most like to call it a few times. You basically fall a "sleep' and when you are awoken the procedure is done. The anesthetic is introduced via an I.V. line and you should not feel anything more an a slight "cold' sensation when the anesthetic is placed in the line. You will drift off rather quickly and painlessly to "sleep". I use the term sleep loosely because it's really not sleep. There are actually several medication that make up the anesthesia one of which is a powerful pain manament medication along with a sedation medications that all work in conjunction to produce the desired effect need to perform the operation. The only draw back is that a small percentage of people are slightly allergic and and have some discomfort when they wake up which usually leads to some vomiting but this is taken care of relatively quickly with a counter medication. I could have gone into much more detail and used ton's of medical jargon but thought it best to make this as clear and simple as possible. anesthesiology is a medical science all to itself and you will be in the hands of a certified medical professional. Millions of people get procedures under general anesthesia a year safely and I'm sure yours wil go just as well.
"Sweet dreams" :o)
2007-09-04 04:35:15
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I got put under when I got all 4 wisdom teeth removed. It's crazy because one second you start feeling the drugs and the next moment you are waking up. It was so weird but not bad at all. You feel a little groggy but other than that it's like you took a nap.
I remember the doctors started to prep my mouth and I started to freak out for a second because I was still awake. " Wait! Don't start I'm still awake!" The next thing I remember they were waking me up because it was time to go home.
Don't worry, it's no biggie as long as you trust your doctor. Good luck and don't be terrified.
2007-09-04 03:43:58
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answer #3
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answered by lovebugbasso 3
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It's not like you're just lying there, waiting for it to happen. You're expecting it, of course, but you're also listening to things going on around you. And, as the others have said, it happens so quickly, you really don't have time to evaluate it.
But it's a really wonderful, deep, sound sleep which protects you from an awareness of the surgery, and we're lucky to have been born in an age when it's available, don't you think?
2007-09-04 03:50:51
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answer #4
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answered by suenami_98 5
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:) i think of no you will honestly answer this question, different than to declare: no one alive who can post a respond knows what death is like; actual death is unknown to the living. One can't extremely evaluate an unknown with a regular state, notwithstanding if the define looks agreeable. notwithstanding if one DID "die" (and become revived), we don't comprehend if getting slightly lifeless is precisely like being a hundred% lifeless with (one hopes) all connection to corpse severed... some standard anathesias artwork via disrupting memory purposes; you in basic terms have not have been given any strategies of notwithstanding stimuli your physique could have persisted on an identical time as decrease than the anesthia... consequently, anesthia is comparable, very straight away, with strategies and memory impairments... Can one go through whilst one has no expertise or memory of it? ... This has useful implications not in basic terms for :) scientific prepare like surgury and regulation yet additionally for concerns approximately Alzheimer's sufferers, and a superb variety of alternative circumstances.... It additionally has another philosophical implications; if somebody has no memory of their strikes, can this is ethical or immoral? What if the guy has no memory of somebody else's strikes? Is evil in basic terms an opinion, or a judgment which calls for some expertise' expertise? individually i think of that a tree that falls interior the woodland does make a sound. apart from anesthia, marvel could have comparable consequences; the physique defends the strategies whilst crushed; inspite of attempt, i won't manage to bear in mind 2d-via-2d a severe accident; and minds have yet another protection, against the misery of loss of expertise; the descriptions presented via others who witnessed the accident are actually in my memory, and it may be ordinary to forget approximately logical discrepancies, jointly with, how am i able to undergo in strategies seeing from this seen attitude, whilst i ought to never have considered it myself? memory is a desirable element... The link under could interest you, in case you compromise with that opinion...
2016-11-14 04:06:42
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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For some reason, I can't remember...I guess that means it worked.
It was kinda scary for me beforehand. I know about the risks. And it is a valid fear. Once I talked to my anesthesiologist I felt reassured. It was like I knew I was in safe hands.
2007-09-04 06:05:16
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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For me, I was given a little prick (like a shot), and the next thing I was in the recovery room with nurses telling me it was time to go home.
Try this: once you feel the prick of the shot, count backwards from 100 and see how far you get. I think I managed to get to 98.
You will do fine, but expect to feel groggy for the rest of the day. Good luck!
2007-09-04 03:43:23
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answer #7
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answered by Texan997 2
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piece of cake. you'll feel a bit weird at first but it works so fast that you'll be under before you know it. many times, the doc will order a mild sedative before you go into the operating room, to calm you down ,if necessary. you can ask your doc about that.
don't worry,the initial feeling is kind of cool but it doesn't last long. you'll do great.
2007-09-04 03:43:00
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answer #8
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answered by racer 51 7
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It's alot like falling asleep, except that when you wake up, you have stitches. It'll happen so fast that you won't even remember it.
2007-09-04 03:42:31
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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You just fall asleep slowly without realizing it... then you wake up slowly too.
2007-09-04 03:42:33
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answer #10
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answered by Phil-IT 2
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