Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology
Volume 20, Issue 1 , Pages 23-29, March 2006

Anaesthesia defined (Gentlemen, this is no humbug)

  • Edmond I Eger II, MD (Professor)

      Affiliations

    • Drs Eger is a paid consultant to Baxter Healthcare Corp.
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: Box 0464, UCSF, San Francisco, CA 94143-0464, USA. Tel.: +1 415 476 6927; fax: +1 415 502 5375.
  • ,
  • James M. Sonner, MD (Associate Professor)

Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA

Our charge was to define anaesthesia as produced by inhaled anaesthetics. A definition may be useful to an understanding of the anaesthetic state, and it may guide studies of the mechanisms by which anaesthesia is produced. All inhaled anaesthetics act on the central nervous system to produce two reversible conditions, immobility and amnesia, that define the anaesthetic state. No other reversible, clinically useful, conditions are essential to the definition. Some conditions are unmeasurable (unconsciousness), not present for all inhaled anaesthetics (relaxation), or are not present at anaesthetizing concentrations (suppression of autonomic reflexes.) One (analgesia) is unmeasurable (the anaesthetized patient cannot tell an investigator that he/she hurts or does not hurt), and surrogate measures (increases in breathing, blood pressure, and heart rate with surgery) suggest that some pain is perceived. These and myriad other changes produced by inhaled anaesthetics are side effects; they do not define anaesthesia; only immobility and amnesia supply such a definition.

Key words: amnesia, analgesia, autonomic reflexes, MAC, muscle relaxation, pain, theories of narcosis, unconsciousness

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PII: S1521-6896(05)00053-4

doi:10.1016/j.bpa.2005.07.011

Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology
Volume 20, Issue 1 , Pages 23-29, March 2006