Anonymous wrote:Op - what type of surgery? You'll get better BTDT advice .
Fwiw, I had a spinal surgery years ago and "woke up". It wasn't a big deal. Everything was numb. I heard voices. Monitors beeping . Fell back to "sleep".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waking up during the operation is one of the rarest risks of anesthesia. There are plenty of other things you should be more worried about, like intubation damaging your throat or dying from the anesthesia. A recent large study found that complications from general anesthesia kill about 1 in 3,000 people. Recent data I have seen says that only around 1 in 20,000 people experience conscious awareness during surgery.
For what it's worth, I underwent general anesthesia twice in a period of two weeks and had absolutely no side effects. It's like being dead, or before you were born. It's not like sleeping where you have dreams and perceive the passage of time. You just don't exist during general anesthesia
You need to cite this study - this information is wrong and alarmist.
Anonymous wrote:Waking up during the operation is one of the rarest risks of anesthesia. There are plenty of other things you should be more worried about, like intubation damaging your throat or dying from the anesthesia. A recent large study found that complications from general anesthesia kill about 1 in 3,000 people. Recent data I have seen says that only around 1 in 20,000 people experience conscious awareness during surgery.
For what it's worth, I underwent general anesthesia twice in a period of two weeks and had absolutely no side effects. It's like being dead, or before you were born. It's not like sleeping where you have dreams and perceive the passage of time. You just don't exist during general anesthesia
Anonymous wrote:Anesthesia is very, very safe and it is extremely rare to wake during anesthesia and be paralyzed. Like super-rare. If you are very nervous, ask to speak to your anesthesiologist beforehand & talk it through.
Please read up on it and educate yourself:
https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/anesthesia/about/pac-20384568
and here:
https://www.americanboardcosmeticsurgery.org/what-is-it-really-like-to-undergo-general-anesthesia#:~:text=Overall%2C%20general%20anesthesia%20is%20very,a%20fatal%20complication%20from%20anesthesia%20.
"Overall, general anesthesia is very safe, and most patients undergo anesthesia with no serious issues. Here are a few things to keep in mind: Even including patients who had emergency surgeries, poor health, or were older, there is a very small chance—just 0.01 – 0.016%—of a fatal complication from anesthesia."
Anonymous wrote:Waking up during the operation is one of the rarest risks of anesthesia. There are plenty of other things you should be more worried about, like intubation damaging your throat or dying from the anesthesia. A recent large study found that complications from general anesthesia kill about 1 in 3,000 people. Recent data I have seen says that only around 1 in 20,000 people experience conscious awareness during surgery.
For what it's worth, I underwent general anesthesia twice in a period of two weeks and had absolutely no side effects. It's like being dead, or before you were born. It's not like sleeping where you have dreams and perceive the passage of time. You just don't exist during general anesthesia