by Mary Mary quite contrary on August 1st, 2009

Mary Mary quite contrary

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When you have surgery, one of the medicines usually administered with the anesthesia causes amnesia. Does it worry you that you may have experienced great pain but not be able to remember it?

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  • by ormewood on August 1st, 2009

    ormewood

    Yeah, I find it very disturbing, but I would prefer it to the alternative, which would be remembering the pain.

    I remember reading that during one of the first early demonstrations of ether (I think it was a tooth extraction) to an audience of doctors, the patient moaned in the middle of it, and the use of ether was almost laughed out of the medical profession. It turned out that one of the effects of ether is suppression of the memory of the pain rather than supressing the pain itsself. I suspect that this is how anesthesia works a lot of the time, and that the fact just doesn't get advertised much. It's a horrifying thought.

    Someone should notify Stephen King. I'm sure he could put the information to good use.

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