How does that work? No way the stuff could have made it's way all the way to my brain in 2 or 3 seconds?
How do injections work?
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SplishSplash
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How do injections work?
When I had my wisdom teeth pulled, they gave me an injection into a vein in my left arm. Seconds later I was unconscious.
How does that work? No way the stuff could have made it's way all the way to my brain in 2 or 3 seconds?
How does that work? No way the stuff could have made it's way all the way to my brain in 2 or 3 seconds?
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SplishSplash
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- FragaGeddon
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They probably use one of the veins that go directly to the brain. So it a couple seconds it hits the brain and probably another second for it to take affect on your brain and put you to sleep.
It's probably one of the ways of the brain protecting itself and your body.
But we'll wait to see what the doc says.
It's probably one of the ways of the brain protecting itself and your body.
But we'll wait to see what the doc says.
[img]http://www.fragageddon.com/images/albums/userpics/10001/FragaGeddon.png[/img]
lol you idiot. Veins run to the heart and you never inject anesthestics in an artery.FragaGeddon wrote:They probably use one of the veins that go directly to the brain. So it a couple seconds it hits the brain and probably another second for it to take affect on your brain and put you to sleep.
It's probably one of the ways of the brain protecting itself and your body.
But we'll wait to see what the doc says.
The anesthestic ran through that vein to your heart (right atrium and ventricle), made a passage through your lungs and back into your heart (left atrium and ventricle). Then it gets pumped through the aorta and splits into many arteries. A portion arrives at the brain where the central narcotic effect takes places.
Splish might have thought that it was 2-3 seconds, but trust me, it's about 30-40 secs before the circulation has brought enough anesthetics to the brain. It probably was some white stuff that they injected and it also burnt a little bit? Then I'm sure that they used Propofol or Etomidate.
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SplishSplash
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It was probably propofol. I've used that a lot with patients undergoing surgery. You inject it slowly since it burns a little bit, you talk softly to the patients for a while and then they're gone quite quickly. See my previous post about how it gets to your brain.SplishSplash wrote:I didn't see the color, but it did burn a little bit.
Are you sure it takes 30-40 seconds?
Here's why I asked the question in the first place:
Drugs like cocaine for example supposedly have an immidiate effect, and I was wondering how they could get to the brain so fast.
- FragaGeddon
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nope, I just talk to them slowly and softly about thinking about relaxing thingsDenz wrote:Do you make your patients count backwards?
Depends on the narcotic you use, it's not really a part what you're shutting down. Propofol for example probably has it effects on the GABA-A receptor. A receptor in the brains that's suspectible for Gamma-Amino-Butyric Acid, which is a inhibitory neuro-transmitter.Denz wrote:What part of the brain does it shut down? or does it "Shut down"? It's like falling asleep without the ability of waking up. So what happens to the brain when this occurs?
Ok Mr. Anesthesiologist, explain.
edit: Grammar Police have arrived.
Most of central working narcotics also lower the brain metabolism.
So people in narcose don't have REM-sleep, since their brains are put to low state.
- FragaGeddon
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- FragaGeddon
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Shit, if you did that to me you'd need to double the dosesaturn wrote:nope, I just talk to them slowly and softly about thinking about relaxing thingsDenz wrote:Do you make your patients count backwards?
Do they do a full induction for dental work? I thought they just went for sedation and then local. In which case it'd be midazolam, which seems to take about 10 seconds.
Then again, as you can tell, I just knock people out for fracture and dislocation reductions, my anaesthetics is pretty damn weak.