Bed wetting is a common side effect from general anesthetic in children. The effect should subside in 2-3 days.
Local anesthetic is safe if the dosage is not excessive. When the area to aspirate is extensive, the high doses of local anesthetic required are toxic and may cause serious complications. In these cases, a general anesthetic (by inhalation) guarantees the best results, reducing risks to a minimum. In any case now the client can return home after the surgery.
cause you wee
Warming anesthetic can cause immediate death!
Yes it can.
Chloroform is no longer used as a general anesthetic due to safety concerns. In the past, it was administered by inhalation to induce unconsciousness. However, chloroform can cause serious side effects, including respiratory failure and cardiac arrest, and its use has been largely replaced by safer alternatives.
In rare cases, allergies or intolerances to certain foods-such as dairy products, citrus products, or chocolate-can cause bed-wetting.
yes, and having surgery will also disrupt the cycle. It will straighten out usually in a cycle or two good luck Joymaker rn
The smell of dandelions in bed wetting could be the sign of a urinary tract infection. This could also be the cause of the bed wetting.
Anesthetic gas is a gas that will cause temporary loss of feeling and consciousness. Anesthetic gas is also a non-flammable gas.
Anesthetic problems
yes it may cause death. It is a anesthetic.
It prevents the anesthetic from being systematically absorbed. The local anesthetic will cause vasodilation, and this can push some of the drug into systemtic circulation. Epinephrine causes vasoconstricton and keeps the anesthetic drug in the area where it was administered.