New York
CONTENTS
- Preface, [5]
- The Induction of Anesthesia—The German Hospital System, [9]
- Cardiac Collapse, [12]
- Respiratory Collapse, [13]
- When Shall the Patient be Declared Ready for Operation, [15]
- Maintenance of the Surgical Plane of Anesthesia, [16]
- Some Important Reflexes, [22]
- Vomiting During Anesthesia, [23]
- Obstructed Breathing, [24]
- The Use of the Breathing Tube, [26]
- Indications for Stimulation during Anesthesia, [28]
- The Influence of Morphine on Narcosis, [30]
- General Course of the Anesthesia, [31]
- Awakening, [31]
- Recession of the Tongue after Narcosis, [33]
- Post-Operative Distress, [34]
- Morphine-Anaesthol-Ether Sequence, [36]
- Minor Anesthesia with Ethyl Chloride, [38]
- Intubation Anesthesia, [38]
- Cases Requiring Superficial Anesthesia, [43]
- Cases Requiring Anesthesia Of Moderate Depth, [44]
- Cases Requiring Profound Anesthesia, [44]
- Conclusion, [45]
PRACTICAL POINTS IN
ANESTHESIA
The Induction of Anesthesia.
I can spare the reader the ordeal of many words by beginning in a concrete way with the outline of a system of anesthesia that is now largely followed at the German Hospital, New York City.
The Mask