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Anesthesia is a medical procedure that uses drugs for CNS suppression to enable painless surgeries and procedures. The selection of anesthetics is influenced by their pharmacokinetic properties, side effects, and patient characteristics. Various types of anesthesia include general, local, regional, spinal, and inhalational.

General anesthesia induces unconsciousness in the whole body, while the others target specific areas or sensations. It is administered to minimize adverse effects, maintain physiological homeostasis during surgery, and improve postoperative outcomes by blocking or treating components of the surgical stress response. General anesthesia involves multiple components like amnesia, analgesia, unconsciousness, immobility in response to noxious stimulation, and attenuation of autonomic responses to noxious stimulation. General anesthetics are classified based on their cellular mechanisms and the anatomic sites they impact. They can either inhibit excitatory systems or activate inhibitory ones. Hemodynamic effects of general anesthesia often involve a decrease in systemic arterial blood pressure due to direct vasodilation, myocardial depression, blunted baroreceptor control, and a generalized decrease in central sympathetic tone. Respiratory effects include reduced ventilatory drive and reflexes that maintain airway patency, necessitating assisted or controlled ventilation. Endotracheal intubation helps avoid aspiration deaths during general anesthesia. Hypothermia, a common occurrence during surgery, results from low ambient temperatures, exposed body cavities, cold intravenous fluids, altered thermoregulatory control, and reduced metabolic rate. Nausea and vomiting are common postoperative complications induced by anesthetics' action on the chemoreceptor trigger zone and the brainstem vomiting center. Adjunct agents such as benzodiazepines, analgesics, α2-agonists, and neuromuscular blockers are often used alongside general anesthetics to enhance their effectiveness and manage side effects.

From Chapter 13:

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13.1 : Opioid Receptors: Overview

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13.2 : Analgesia and Pain Management

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13.3 : Opioid Analgesics: Morphine and Other Natural Cogeners

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13.6 : Stages of General Anesthesia

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13.7 : Parenteral Anesthetics: Overview

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13.8 : Inhalational Anesthetics: Overview

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