• Title/Summary/Keyword: Anesthetic hypnosis

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Use of hypnosis in dentistry for improving patient satisfaction: as a means of non-phamaceutical approach (치과 환자의 진료 만족도 증진을 위한 비약물적 접근으로서 최면 요법의 분석)

  • Ong, Seung-Hwan;Lee, Sung-Jo;Cho, In-Woo;Park, Jung-Chul
    • Journal of Dental Rehabilitation and Applied Science
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    • v.33 no.3
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    • pp.169-177
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    • 2017
  • Patient management is considered an important factor in dental field. The aim of this review is to analyze the efficacy of hypnosis to treat fear, anxiety, pain, stress of dental patients, and see how it can be adopted in dentistry for improving patient satisfaction. Medline research was carried out to find the use of hypnosis in dentistry and other aspects of hypnosis in medical area. It can help patient more comfortable, relax, and accordingly reduce patient's negative feelings such as fear, anxiety, pain, stress during dental treatment. Also, it affects patient recovery after surgery by accelerating healing speed and reinforce immune system. When hypnosis is used with other anesthetic method, it can reduce the use of main medication, leading to reduce possibility of side effect. Therefore, using Hypnosis can give patients more comfortable dental experience, both mentally and physically, ultimately making patients more satisfied with the dental treatment.

Characteristics of electroencephalogram signatures in sedated patients induced by various anesthetic agents

  • Choi, Byung-Moon
    • Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.241-251
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    • 2017
  • Devices that monitor the depth of hypnosis based on the electroencephalogram (EEG) have long been commercialized, and clinicians use these to titrate the dosage of hypnotic agents. However, these have not yet been accepted as standard monitoring devices for anesthesiology. The primary reason is that the use of these monitoring devices does not completely prevent awareness during surgery, and the development of these devices has not taken into account the neurophysiological mechanisms of hypnotic agents, thus making it possible to show different levels of unconsciousness in the same brain status. An alternative is to monitor EEGs that are not signal processed with numerical values presented by these monitoring devices. Several studies have reported that power spectral analysis alone can distinguish the effects of different hypnotic agents on consciousness changes. This paper introduces the basic concept of power spectral analysis and introduces the EEG characteristics of various hypnotic agents that are used in sedation.

Safe Sedation and Hypnosis using Dexmedetomidine for Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery in a Prone Position

  • Kim, Kyung Hoon
    • The Korean Journal of Pain
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.313-320
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    • 2014
  • Dexmedetomidine, an imidazoline compound, is a highly selective ${\alpha}_2$-adrenoceptor agonist with sympatholytic, sedative, amnestic, and analgesic properties. In order to minimize the patients' pain and anxiety during minimally invasive spine surgery (MISS) when compared to conventional surgery under general anesthesia, an adequate conscious sedation (CS) or monitored anesthetic care (MAC) should be provided. Commonly used intravenous sedatives and hypnotics, such as midazolam and propofol, are not suitable for operations in a prone position due to undesired respiratory depression. Dexmedetomidine converges on an endogenous non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep-promoting pathway to exert its sedative effects. The great merit of dexmedetomidine for CS or MAC is the ability of the operator to recognize nerve damage during percutaneous endoscopic lumbar discectomy, a representative MISS. However, there are 2 shortcomings for dexmedetomidine in MISS: hypotension/bradycardia and delayed emergence. Its hypotension/bradycardiac effects can be prevented by ketamine intraoperatively. Using atipamezole (an ${\alpha}_2$-adrenoceptor antagonist) might allow doctors to control the rate of recovery from procedural sedation in the future. MAC, with other analgesics such as ketorolac and opioids, creates ideal conditions for MISS. In conclusion, dexmedetomidine provides a favorable surgical condition in patients receiving MISS in a prone position due to its unique properties of conscious sedation followed by unconscious hypnosis with analgesia. However, no respiratory depression occurs based on the dexmedetomidine-related endogenous sleep pathways involves the inhibition of the locus coeruleus in the pons, which facilitates VLPO firing in the anterior hypothalamus.

Adequate anesthetic induction dose in a morbidly obese patient based on bioelectrical impedance analysis. -Case report- (병적 비만 환자에서 생체 전기 임피던스 분석을 이용한 적절한 마취 유도 용량 -증례보고-)

  • Lee, Ki-Jae;Choi, Seungseo;Baek, Seon Ju;Kim, Dong-Chan;Lee, Jeongwoo;Lee, Jun Ho
    • Journal of the Korea Convergence Society
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    • v.11 no.10
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    • pp.349-353
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    • 2020
  • Background: The dosage of the anesthetic drugs is generally determined by the total body weight of the patients. However, the drugs can be overdosed when the patient is morbidly obese. We have determined anesthetic induction dose based on lean body mass estimated from bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA). Case: We report a case of morbidly obese patient (161 cm, 138 kg and body mass index 53.1) who had an elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The dose of induction agent was determined by lean body mass estimated by BIA, and the sedation was assessed by the observer's assessment alertness/sedation scale. Conclusions: Dose determination through lean body mass measured by BIA is useful in highly obese patients.