General Anaesthetics
The administration of anaesthesia and patient resuscitation in the operating room are tasks that fall under the purview of the specialists in the anaesthesia, intensive care unit, and pain management division. The patient is put into a state that is similar to sleep via the administration of anaesthetics intravenously or through the inhalation of anaesthetic vapour. Under the safest circumstances, it lessens or completely eliminates pain throughout the process.
At the Paris and Saint Cloud locations, the anaesthesia, intensive care unit, and pain management departments supervise and care for patients undergoing surgery before, during, and after the procedure, as well as for patients undergoing endoscopies, radiography, and radiation.
Pre-anaesthesia consultation to identify risk factors and personalise the preoperative evaluation are some of its activities making it easier to decide between local and general anaesthesia.
Anaesthesia for both traditional and outpatient care surgery, Monitoring and immediate treatment after surgery, Insertion of long-term intravenous devices associated to chemotherapy, Reduce stress and anxiety, Control over nutrition.
The patient receives systematic pain management throughout the course of the procedure to make sure they wake up pain-free. As soon as pain is noted in the postoperative phase, this treatment is modified to meet the demands of the patient. Systematic measures are taken to prevent adverse effects including nausea and vomiting.
Cancer can result in persistent pain that needs special care. Different medical professionals, such as anaesthesiologists, neurosurgeons, geriatricians, and oncologists, manage pain. Anaesthesiologists are medical professionals who closely watch over patients before, during, and after surgery. They employ highly sophisticated electronic equipment to continuously display the blood pressure, blood oxygen levels, cardiac function, and breathing patterns of the patients. The safety of general anaesthesia has been significantly increased by these technologies. Additionally, anaesthesiologists administer pain medication during labour and delivery as well as for less invasive operations like those used to examine blood vessels and internal organs.
Researchers are learning more about the fundamental principles underlying how anaesthetics function. Additionally, they are researching the short- and long-term impacts of these medications on particular demographics, including the elderly, kids, and cancer survivors. These investigations will demonstrate whether particular anaesthetics are superior to others for those populations. The ability to better personalise medications for each patient will be made possible by research into how a person's genetic composition impacts how they respond to anaesthetics. Scientists aspire to create anaesthetics that are safer, more efficient, and more individualised in the future.
Anesthesiology and Clinical Science Research Journal publishes high-impact original work in all branches of anaesthesia, Critical Care Medicine, Translational and Clinical Sciences, Clinical Practice, and Technology, Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine, Pain Management.
Authors can submit their manuscripts as an email attachment to: aaacsr@alliedjournals.org
Best Wishes,
Journal Co-ordinator
Anesthesiology and Clinical Science Research.