...nervous adult patients?
I believe they need someone to administer it, which would add to the cost, and there are other reasons why it shouldn't be used. But is it available in some cases?
Yes they do......nitrous oxide and oxygen.....laughing gas. It has to be administered by a qualified anaesthetist and this provides a bit of spare cash" for the boys.
Yes they do......nitrous oxide and oxygen.....laughing gas.
It has to be administered by a qualified anaesthetist and this provides a bit of spare cash" for the boys.
Ordinary dental surgeries are not allowed to use a general anaesthetic at all, they require you to go to a specialist surgery or even hospital for those nowadays.
My GP (I am going back to when I was a child) had an interest in anaesthesia and did not hold surgeries on a Friday morning because that was when he was at the dentist's administering gas. At least he worked for his money; spare cash for the boys in countersigning cremation certificates was known as "ash cash".
Obiter....yes, that was very popular, but now IV sedation is mainly used but for resistant children and certainly adults, inhalation anesthesia is still used.
Ash Cash.....LOL.....was a very popular collection it funded many hospital mess parties with alcohol.
My experience here in Ontario is that the nitrous-oxide mixture is used in an "ordinary" dental office merely to relax the patient...sort of a gaseous Valium. Any procedure in which the patient is required to be "put under" has to be done in a dental-surgeon's office or, in some circumstances, a hospital
I take a massive dose of lorazepam. I take 4 (1mg) the night before, 2 (1mg) in the morning and 4 (1mg) 1 hour before the appointment I aint got a clue whats happening and im out of it for another 8 hours when I get home I get someone going with me but I cant do it without it .
Well Sandy you know that the dentist you have been to and I will go eventually - the actual dentist is experienced enough to give you the sedation via your arm. That has been offered to me.
I had gas once for pre-brace extractions when I was 11. I can still remember it vividly, really horrific. I'm sure if used today it would be done in far less scary manner.
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