Bonjour tu c'est Léa et je suis en Léa je vous bien ça c'est une bebe fellle une bebe fellle vous avez des questions ou des marques déposées à la recherche d'un poste dans votre mail je vous remercie
If you try to accommodate the whims and wishes of every child in this manner, then no surgery is ever going to get done! I am 65 years old, and the children of my era got the ether drop method of anesthesia, and it was far more unpleasant than anything used today. Our parents were not allowed in the operating room to hold us or give us a kiss as we went to sleep! We were brought to the OR, strapped to a table, then simply told to breathe in and out as a nurse held a flimsy gauze mask over our nose and mouth as they poured ether into it. The ether vapors smelled terrible, and the nurse poured more and more of the fast evaporating liquid into the mask every minute, and the patient literally felt like they were being drowned or suffocated before they finally passed out.
@@philiphatfield5666 I was given anesthetic gas in both my surgeries in 1971 and 1972 and I'll never forget the strong pungent odor of whatever they gave me it was awful. I tried to resist but the anesthetist kept pushing the black mask onto my face. I don't know what type of anesthesia it was but it traumatized me and to this day certain odors will instantly trigger the awful memory of it😖
@@geraldwilson681 that sounds awful. I thought we stopped doing that much longer ago. But I’m only in my 20s. I’m sorry you and many others had to experience that. I believe what they had you inhale was diethyl ether. They only use it on animals now.
It wasn't Diethyl Ether because it was phased out of the US. pretty much by the 1960s. However the modern present day inhalation gases they use are ethers with halogens chemically bonded to it which now makes it non-flammable and non-explosive. I tried to research the Harrisburg Hospital patient surgical records through their records department one day to see if I could see what inhalational agent they gave me then, and the person told me that they wouldn't have it due to it being so long ago way back in February 1971!! If any anesthetist or anesthesiologist reads this I would be grateful for any information in regards to this!!
Plus sometimes surgery is just necessary and there is no time to prepare the child. I agree, if its a schedules surgery the parents could practice this or talk the kid through, but not if its an emergency surgery.
This is very sensitive 2 child patient which is important. The anesthetist is even rubbin the child's hed and dad is reely holdin him
Riro0r8r9r9t9t0t9t0t0t0y0y0y3fieorp0ieor
E8e9r9r9t90t0ttt9t00t
Aaw cute little boy he is not crying great job cute little boy
Thank you dear Doctor. Thank Father. Pretty Baby God help please. The Best Wishes from Germany ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
you are amazing
you can do it br brave
Good
Sevoran 8-8 the best
I had it.
Deus abençoe vcs ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ 👵🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🙏🙏🙏🙌🙌👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Hoihioiuuiiyyjjyuuytreyyttytreeeuuytuuuu u6yyttuutreuu
Bbnñhnji jngbbn yh by gv gggggggggt i
What are the units of measurements used for anesthesia? Would it be kPa,hKa or mg per liter?
MAC
@@shadmisseldine9505 f
jacco nouwen (28-12-1968)
Nice
Why arent they turning the vapour at maximum concentration? From the start
Because it would cause violent choking if you get the maximum dose all at once.
Por que eles fãs esse tipo de cirrurgia nas crianças alguém pode me falar que tipo de doenças essas crianças tem. Eu sou brasileira.
Tbm queria saber
Is a blood test required prior to submitting this type of anesthesia?
1:27
Yes please 1:34
I want to be just like the child in the video
yeaah me to
@@RedBaronnl oh
I had this before
OK
Kelly Ruddy
@@celestesantillan3431 k)lp
@@laibagul5761 kcjqifidk ubjwidukwlso
😂 if the child struggles.......very humane
V qq
Bac Burrito Oof yeah XD
@@isabellar.s23 speech English
شبيه
بس اني وياج عربي
@@user-mi8mg2qn2k bshdhdhdysyy3uuuu3sushrhhrf $÷&&÷^#€&÷€÷€
Здравствуйте. Предварительно контур аппарата заполняют севофлураном?
after operaction child will be kk plzzz tell me
Mhjui
أحمد
Bonjour tu c'est Léa et je suis en Léa je vous bien ça c'est une bebe fellle une bebe fellle vous avez des questions ou des marques déposées à la recherche d'un poste dans votre mail je vous remercie
Is Impossible?
N8
Kaitlyn mare jasmine Rick sneryl torre 👨❤️👨
R643f7
Wsrsct
е щезз
my baby 7month plzzz msg me
Ae
I DON'T LIKE THIS WAY THEY DID PUT ME IN SLEEP GAS. IT LIKE IN HELL
вы почему
😡😡😡😡😡
Why not stop the induction and schedule for therapy to improve mask acceptance and reschedule the surgery if the child struggles?
If you try to accommodate the whims and wishes of every child in this manner, then no surgery is ever going to get done! I am 65 years old, and the children of my era got the ether drop method of anesthesia, and it was far more unpleasant than anything used today. Our parents were not allowed in the operating room to hold us or give us a kiss as we went to sleep! We were brought to the OR, strapped to a table, then simply told to breathe in and out as a nurse held a flimsy gauze mask over our nose and mouth as they poured ether into it. The ether vapors smelled terrible, and the nurse poured more and more of the fast evaporating liquid into the mask every minute, and the patient literally felt like they were being drowned or suffocated before they finally passed out.
@@philiphatfield5666 I was given anesthetic gas in both my surgeries in 1971 and 1972 and I'll never forget the strong pungent odor of whatever they gave me it was awful. I tried to resist but the anesthetist kept pushing the black mask onto my face. I don't know what type of anesthesia it was but it traumatized me and to this day certain odors will instantly trigger the awful memory of it😖
@@geraldwilson681 that sounds awful. I thought we stopped doing that much longer ago. But I’m only in my 20s. I’m sorry you and many others had to experience that. I believe what they had you inhale was diethyl ether. They only use it on animals now.
It wasn't Diethyl Ether because it was phased out of the US. pretty much by the 1960s. However the modern present day inhalation gases they use are ethers with halogens chemically bonded to it which now makes it non-flammable and non-explosive. I tried to research the Harrisburg Hospital patient surgical records through their records department one day to see if I could see what inhalational agent they gave me then, and the person told me that they wouldn't have it due to it being so long ago way back in February 1971!! If any anesthetist or anesthesiologist reads this I would be grateful for any information in regards to this!!
Plus sometimes surgery is just necessary and there is no time to prepare the child. I agree, if its a schedules surgery the parents could practice this or talk the kid through, but not if its an emergency surgery.
😅😂😁🤣😁😁😁😁