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Your anaesthetic

Anaesthetists

  • Specialist doctors
  • Responsible for your anaesthetic and pain relief
  • They will stay with you throughout the operation
  • Plan your care, if needed, in the ICU, HDU, OIR etc.
CUH anaesthetist Louisa Swain administers anaesthetic gas to a patient

General anaesthetic

  • When you are have major surgery you are likely to have a general anaesthetic
  • Your anaesthetist will see you before surgery, to ask you about your health, allergies, previous anaesthetics and explain the anaesthetic plan to you
  • In theatre, you will get a cannula in your forearm or hand, which will be used to put medications in to get you to sleep
  • You will be usually asked to breathe some oxygen before you go to sleep
  • When you are asleep you will have a breathing tube in your throat – this will be gone before you wake up.

Pain

  • Pain is common after major surgery
  • We need your pain under control to enable you to move and cough
  • Inpatient pain team – team of specialists who manage pain relief in the hospital
  • Don’t be afraid to ask for painkillers.
Anaesthetist giving patient a pain relief injection.

Pain relief – epidural and spinal injections

  • Both involve an injection of local anaesthetic in your back
  • Epidural catheters can provide pain relief for several days postop
  • Usually performed awake for safety reasons.
Royal College of Anaesthetists logo, association of anaesthetists logo, trusted information creator accreditation mark

Pain relief options – PCA

  • “Patient Controlled Analgesia”
  • Medication pump which gives a small dose of strong pain killer IV when the button is pressed
  • Nurses will keep a close eye on you and check your oxygen levels and blood pressure regularly.
Hand holding a medication pump alongside an image of the machine that checks oxygen levels and blood pressure.

Anaesthesia and pain relief options

  • All options have side effects and complications, like all medical procedures
  • Factors such as medical history sometimes suggest that a particular option may be safer
  • Your anaesthetist will explain in detail the options on the morning of surgery and make a decision, with your input and assent.

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