Who's Behind the Mask?
Almost all of us have either had some type of surgery or have
known someone that has had surgery. What would have been done for our
friends or us if there were no such thing as surgery? It is practically impossible to imagine modern medicine
without surgery or surgeons as many of the most remarkable,
life-extending advances in healthcare have occurred within our
lifetime.
It is even more of a stretch of our imagination to think which of
these advancements in surgery would have been achieved without
anesthesia. The field of
anesthesiology has long gone unaccredited for their vital part of
these successes. In the mid eighteen hundreds nitrous oxide (laughing gas) was
accidentally discovered to cause intoxication resulting in amusement
and insensitivity to pain. Ether
produced a similar intoxication and these gasses were used by
traveling entertainers who would organize “ether frolics” as
public demonstrations to amuse the audience rather than for their
medical effects. In 1842
Dr. Crawford Long of Georgia used ether to perform the first painless
surgery. Later in 1846
Dr. William Morton, a Boston dentist, astonished his colleagues at
Massachusetts General Hospital by demonstrating in a crowded
amphitheater that ether vapor could douse the pain of surgery.
He demonstrated this on a local newspaper printer named Gilbert
Abbott as he removed a tumor from his neck.
Prior to these anesthetic gasses surgical patient relied upon prayer,
hypnosis, ice compresses, herbal mixtures and other intoxicating
substances, none of which produced good anesthesia.
It wasn’t until about the 1950’s that work began on other
inhalation anesthetic agents. Since
that time astounding advances have been made in patient monitoring and
in the development of safer, shorter acting and more effective
anesthetic agents. All of this has been possible through the medical research
that we support.
There are more than 25 million surgical procedures performed each year
just in the United States alone and in each of these cases an
anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist makes this possible.
These specialists do much more than simply administer a dose of
medication to render the patient anesthetic.
They regulate and monitor the patient’s critical life
functions throughout the surgery, which requires a wide range of
knowledge about medications, how the body functions at a cellular
level and how it responds under the conditions of certain types of
disease. These
specialists begin their work preoperatively by carefully assessing the
patient to determine what likely will be needed for their upcoming
surgery. Intraoperatively
they regulate and manage vital life functions including breathing,
heart rhythm, blood pressure and brain and kidney functions.
They utilize sophisticated monitors to maintain a delicate
balance of these vital functions. At the conclusion of the surgery they time the
discontinuation of these medications or reverse the effects of the
anesthetic medications to return the patient comfortably back to
consciousness.
Anesthesia is safer today than it has ever been in its entire history.
Since about 1970 the number of anesthesiologists in the United
States has more than doubled but the complications from anesthesia
have dramatically declined. All
of this has occurred during a time when surgery and anesthesia have
gone beyond their prior bounds. Together
we are able to perform intrauterine fetal surgery and successfully
treat and support the youngest of premature infants in neonatal units.
At the other end of the spectrum we have gone well beyond our
prior bounds by successfully doing major surgical procedures on
100-year-old patients. The next time you have surgery be sure to recognize and thank
the quiet person behind the mask.
Worldwide Web Resources
American Society of Anesthesiologists
http://www.asahq.org/
This is one of the more thorough web sites on
the topic of anesthesia, including comprehensive information for
professionals and the public, including a link to their professional
journal.
How does anesthesia work?
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/970818/18pain.htm
This
is a reprint of an article from U.S. News and World Report on the
topic of anesthesia.
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