How does anesthesia work Steven Zheng

If you’ve had surgery,

you might remember starting to count
backwards from ten,

nine,

eight,

and then waking up with the surgery
already over before you even got to five.

And it might seem like you were asleep,
but you weren’t.

You were under anesthesia,

which is much more complicated.

You were unconscious,

but you also couldn’t move,

form memories,

or, hopefully, feel pain.

Without being able to block all those
processes at once,

many surgeries would be
way too traumatic to perform.

Ancient medical texts from Egypt,
Asia and the Middle East

all describe early anesthetics

containing things like opium poppy,

mandrake fruit,

and alcohol.

Today, anesthesiologists often combine

regional, inhalational
and intravenous agents

to get the right balance for a surgery.

Regional anesthesia blocks pain signals
from a specific part of the body

from getting to the brain.

Pain and other messages travel through
the nervous system as electrical impulses.

Regional anesthetics work by setting up
an electrical barricade.

They bind to the proteins
in neurons' cell membranes

that let charged particles in and out,

and lock out positively charged particles.

One compound that does this is cocaine,

whose painkilling effects
were discovered by accident

when an ophthalmology intern
got some on his tongue.

It’s still occasionally used
as an anesthetic,

but many of the more common
regional anesthetics

have a similar chemical structure
and work the same way.

But for major surgeries where you need
to be unconscious,

you’ll want something that acts
on the entire nervous system,

including the brain.

That’s what inhalational anesthetics do.

In Western medicine, diethyl ether
was the first common one.

It was best known as a recreational drug

until doctors started to realize that
people sometimes didn’t notice

injuries they received
under the influence.

In the 1840s, they started sedating
patients with ether

during dental extractions and surgeries.

Nitrous oxide became popular
in the decades that followed

and is still used today.

although ether derivatives,
like sevoflurane, are more common.

Inhalational anesthesia is usually
supplemented with intravenous anesthesia,

which was developed in the 1870s.

Common intravenous agents include
sedatives, like propofol,

which induce unconsciousness,

and opioids, like fentanyl,
which reduce pain.

These general anesthetics
also seem to work

by affecting electrical signals
in the nervous system.

Normally, the brain’s electrical signals
are a chaotic chorus

as different parts of the brain
communicate with each other.

That connectivity keeps you awake
and aware.

But as someone becomes anesthetized,

those signals become calmer
and more organized,

suggesting that different
parts of the brain

aren’t talking to each other anymore.

There’s a lot we still don’t know
about exactly how this happens.

Several common anesthetics bind to
the GABA-A receptor in the brain’s neurons.

They hold the gateway open,

letting negatively charged particles
flow into the cell.

Negative charge builds up
and acts like a log jam,

keeping the neuron from transmitting
electrical signals.

The nervous system has lots
of these gated channels,

controlling pathways for movement,

memory,

and consciousness.

Most anesthetics probably
act on more than one,

and they don’t act on
just the nervous system.

Many anesthetics also affect the heart,

lungs,

and other vital organs.

Just like early anesthetics,

which included familiar poisons like
hemlock and aconite,

modern drugs can
have serious side effects.

So an anesthesiologist has to mix
just the right balance of drugs

to create all the features of anesthesia,

while carefully monitoring
the patient’s vital signs,

and adjusting the drug mixture as needed.

Anesthesia is complicated,

but figuring out how to use it

allowed for the development
of new and better surgical techniques.

Surgeons could learn how to routinely
and safely perform C-sections,

reopen blocked arteries,

replace damaged livers and kidneys,

and many other life-saving operations.

And each year, new anesthesia techniques
are developed

that will ensure more and more patients
survive the trauma of surgery.

如果你做过手术,

你可能还
记得从十、

九、

八开始倒数,

然后
在你还没到五之前醒来,手术就已经结束了。

看起来你好像睡着了,
但事实并非如此。

你处于麻醉状态,

这要复杂得多。

你是无意识的,

但你也无法移动,无法

形成记忆,

或者,希望,感到疼痛。

如果不能一次阻止所有这些
过程,

许多手术
将太痛苦而无法执行。

来自埃及、
亚洲和中东的古代医学文献

都描述了早期的麻醉剂,

其中含有罂粟、

曼德拉果

和酒精等物质。

今天,麻醉师经常将

局部、吸入
和静脉注射剂结合起来,

以获得手术的正确平衡。

局部麻醉会阻止
来自身体特定部位的疼痛信号

到达大脑。

疼痛和其他信息
以电脉冲的形式通过神经系统传播。

区域麻醉剂通过设置
电子路障来发挥作用。

它们与
神经元细胞膜

中的蛋白质结合,使带电粒子进出,

并锁定带正电的粒子。

一种可以做到这一点的化合物是可卡因,

当一名眼科实习生
在他的舌头上沾了一些时,偶然发现了可卡因的止痛作用。

它仍然偶尔
用作麻醉剂,

但许多更常见的
局部麻醉剂

具有相似的化学结构
并且工作方式相同。

但是
对于需要失去知觉的大手术,

你会想要一些作用
于整个神经系统的东西,

包括大脑。

这就是吸入麻醉剂的作用。

在西医中,乙醚
是最常见的一种。

在医生开始意识到
人们有时不会注意到

他们
在影响下受到的伤害之前,它最出名的是一种娱乐性药物。

在 1840 年代,他们开始

在拔牙和手术期间用乙醚对患者进行镇静。

一氧化二氮
在随后的几十年里变得流行起来,

至今仍在使用。

虽然醚衍生物,
如七氟醚,更常见。

吸入麻醉通常
辅以静脉麻醉,

这是在 1870 年代发展起来的。

常见的静脉注射剂包括
镇静剂,如异丙酚,

可引起昏迷

,阿片类药物,如芬太尼
,可减轻疼痛。

这些全身麻醉剂
似乎也

通过影响
神经系统中的电信号起作用。

通常,当大脑的不同部分相互交流时,大脑的电信号
是混乱的合唱

这种连通性使您保持清醒
和清醒。

但随着某人被麻醉,

这些信号变得
更加平静和更有条理,

这表明
大脑的不同部分

不再相互交谈。

有很多我们仍然不
知道这是如何发生的。

几种常见的麻醉剂与
大脑神经元中的 GABA-A 受体结合。

他们保持网关打开,

让带负电的粒子
流入细胞。

负电荷积聚起来
,就像日志堵塞一样,

阻止神经元传输
电信号。

神经系统有
很多这样的门控通道,

控制着运动、

记忆

和意识的通路。

大多数麻醉剂可能
不止作用于一种麻醉剂,

而且它们不仅仅作用于
神经系统。

许多麻醉剂也会影响心脏、

和其他重要器官。

就像早期的麻醉剂,

其中包括熟悉的毒药,如
铁杉和附子,

现代药物可能会
产生严重的副作用。

因此,麻醉师必须混合
恰到好处的药物平衡

以创造麻醉的所有特征,

同时仔细
监测患者的生命体征,

并根据需要调整药物混合物。

麻醉很复杂,

但弄清楚如何使用它

可以开发
出新的更好的手术技术。

外科医生可以学习如何常规
和安全地进行剖腹产,

重新打开阻塞的动脉,

更换受损的肝脏和肾脏,

以及许多其他挽救生命的手术。

每年,都会开发出新的麻醉技术

,以确保越来越多的患者
在手术创伤中幸存下来。