(no title)
pineal
|
3 years ago
The way it usually works is that we have anesthesia put the patient entirely to sleep to start and then we wake them for the sensitive part of the case when we need to perform stimulation and cognitive testing. We use local anesthetic like lidocaine and marcaine on the scalp while opening to minimize pain when temporarily awake. Then the patient goes back to sleep for closing. It’s a tough balance for the anesthesiologists to maintain —- they are as critical to the procedure as the neurosurgeon is.
noduerme|3 years ago
While I'm asking, there's a question that's been driving me crazy since a recent colonoscopy where I was sedated with fentanyl and (? something like diazepam). I think I remember being awake and remembering most of the procedure immediately afterwards, but within about an hour I couldn't remember anything except one moment when I was in pain and shouting that I was going to explode, as a nurse put another ampule in the drip line. What's bugging me is, was I really experiencing pain like that and aware the whole time, and the drugs just erased my memory of it afterwards? Or was that just a breakthrough moment in an otherwise uneventful procedure where I felt relatively little?
quercusa|3 years ago
>Subclinical doses of propofol produce anterograde amnesia, characterized by an early failure of memory consolidation.[0]
I'm going to talk to the doctor for my next one about skipping the drugs. I've heard it's unpleasnat but not too painful.
[0] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000709121...
[1] https://academic.oup.com/bja/article/96/3/289/325896