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What are the risks? ... If you have a general anaesthetic, you will be asleep during the operation/procedure. When you have a general anaesthetic you won't feel or remember the operation. Anaesthetic medicines stop the messages from your nerves being recognised by your brain.
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hcd2.bupa.co.uk/fact_sheets/html/anaesthesia.html
hcd2.bupa.co.uk/fact_sheets/html/anaesthesia.html
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Risks of general anaesthesia in people with obstructive sleep apnoea. Cindy den Herder, resident in ear, nose, and throat surgery1, Joachim Schmeck, ...
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www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/329/7472/955
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This is a PATIENTS' GUIDE to Anaesthesia ... This may avoids the risks and unpleasantness sometimes associated with general anaesthesia and may provide specific benefits such as reduced blood loss and better postoperative analgesia. People are often anxious about having surgery under a local or regional anaesthetic.
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www.salus.it/anest/patient.html
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Although the risks of general anaesthetic are minimal due to all the improvements in the field of medicine and technology, the risks are still there ... Anaesthetic drugs may affect people differently, but general anaesthesia is a drug-induced sleep and for many people the risk hereof is very low. For others however,
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www.cosmeticprocedure.net/cosmetic_procedure/general_an...
www.cosmeticprocedure.net/cosmetic_procedure/general_anaesthetic_risks.htm
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(3) Laboratory tests, chest x-rays and ECG are often required before having GA, because of the greater risks involved. (4) Very advanced training and ... done under conscious sedation with local anaesthetic. However, general anaesthesia is not widely on offer, and must be carried out in a hospital, in the UK at least.
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www.dentalfearcentral.org/general_anesthesia_dental.htm...
www.dentalfearcentral.org/general_anesthesia_dental.html
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Specifically, the patient should be told about the risks of bleeding, hematoma formation, infection, inadvertent damage to the glans, removal of too much or too little skin, aesthetically unpleasing results and a change of ... Wakefield SE, Elewa AA. Adult circumcision under local anaesthetic. Br J Urol 1995;75:96.
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www.aafp.org/afp/990315ap/1514.html
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An anaesthetic is used to temporarily reduce or take away sensation, usually so that otherwise painful procedures or surgery can be performed. ... general, which make the patient unconscious.
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www.netdoctor.co.uk/health_advice/facts/anaesthetic.htm
www.netdoctor.co.uk/health_advice/facts/anaesthetic.htm
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Anaesthesia information for the general public ... Will I wake up during a general anaesthetic? ... When someone is not fasted and there is an urgent need to perform surgery the anaesthetic technique can be modified to minimise the risks associated with not fasting.
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bhhdoa.org.au/aip/faq.html
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Not only did they avoid the risks of a general anaesthetic, they were sedated in a dentist’s chair, which suggests the procedure could be used as a way of reducing hospital waiting lists and freeing beds.
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www.innovations-report.de/html/berichte/medizin_gesundh...
www.innovations-report.de/html/berichte/medizin_gesundheit/bericht-33086.html
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