How does anesthesia work? - Steven Zheng

18,006,960 views ・ 2015-12-07

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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If you've had surgery,
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you might remember starting to count backwards from ten,
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nine,
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eight,
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and then waking up with the surgery already over before you even got to five.
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And it might seem like you were asleep, but you weren't.
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You were under anesthesia,
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which is much more complicated.
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You were unconscious,
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but you also couldn't move,
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form memories,
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or, hopefully, feel pain.
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Without being able to block all those processes at once,
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many surgeries would be way too traumatic to perform.
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Ancient medical texts from Egypt, Asia and the Middle East
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all describe early anesthetics
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containing things like opium poppy,
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mandrake fruit,
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and alcohol.
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Today, anesthesiologists often combine
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regional, inhalational and intravenous agents
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to get the right balance for a surgery.
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Regional anesthesia blocks pain signals from a specific part of the body
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from getting to the brain.
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Pain and other messages travel through the nervous system as electrical impulses.
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Regional anesthetics work by setting up an electrical barricade.
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They bind to the proteins in neurons' cell membranes
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that let charged particles in and out,
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and lock out positively charged particles.
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One compound that does this is cocaine,
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whose painkilling effects were discovered by accident
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when an ophthalmology intern got some on his tongue.
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It's still occasionally used as an anesthetic,
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but many of the more common regional anesthetics
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have a similar chemical structure and work the same way.
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But for major surgeries where you need to be unconscious,
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you'll want something that acts on the entire nervous system,
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including the brain.
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That's what inhalational anesthetics do.
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In Western medicine, diethyl ether was the first common one.
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It was best known as a recreational drug
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until doctors started to realize that people sometimes didn't notice
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injuries they received under the influence.
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In the 1840s, they started sedating patients with ether
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during dental extractions and surgeries.
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Nitrous oxide became popular in the decades that followed
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and is still used today.
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although ether derivatives, like sevoflurane, are more common.
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Inhalational anesthesia is usually supplemented with intravenous anesthesia,
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which was developed in the 1870s.
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Common intravenous agents include sedatives, like propofol,
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which induce unconsciousness,
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and opioids, like fentanyl, which reduce pain.
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These general anesthetics also seem to work
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by affecting electrical signals in the nervous system.
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Normally, the brain's electrical signals are a chaotic chorus
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as different parts of the brain communicate with each other.
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That connectivity keeps you awake and aware.
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But as someone becomes anesthetized,
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those signals become calmer and more organized,
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suggesting that different parts of the brain
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aren't talking to each other anymore.
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There's a lot we still don't know about exactly how this happens.
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Several common anesthetics bind to the GABA-A receptor in the brain's neurons.
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They hold the gateway open,
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letting negatively charged particles flow into the cell.
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Negative charge builds up and acts like a log jam,
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keeping the neuron from transmitting electrical signals.
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The nervous system has lots of these gated channels,
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controlling pathways for movement,
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memory,
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and consciousness.
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Most anesthetics probably act on more than one,
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and they don't act on just the nervous system.
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Many anesthetics also affect the heart,
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lungs,
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and other vital organs.
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Just like early anesthetics,
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which included familiar poisons like hemlock and aconite,
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modern drugs can have serious side effects.
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So an anesthesiologist has to mix just the right balance of drugs
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to create all the features of anesthesia,
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while carefully monitoring the patient's vital signs,
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and adjusting the drug mixture as needed.
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Anesthesia is complicated,
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but figuring out how to use it
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allowed for the development of new and better surgical techniques.
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Surgeons could learn how to routinely and safely perform C-sections,
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reopen blocked arteries,
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replace damaged livers and kidneys,
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and many other life-saving operations.
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And each year, new anesthesia techniques are developed
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that will ensure more and more patients survive the trauma of surgery.
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