How are you taken to the operating room?
How are you transported to the operating room for an outpatient D&C? Will you be wheeled in and given general anesthesia while you're still in bed, and then seated on the gynecological chair, or will you have to walk to the operating room in your surgical gown and sit on the chair yourself, and then receive general anesthesia?
Moin,
there are various possibilities, depending on the facility in which the surgery takes place. If one operates in a central surgery of a clinic, the initiation (whether full anaesthesia or regional anaesthesia) takes place in a special introductory room and one is then pushed into the surgery lying on the OP table. We also have outpatient surgery in our clinic, in which the patients are partially guided in footsteps, put themselves on the table and go out even if they had only one regional anesthesia. This principle will also apply to established practices. In full anaesthesia it is not possible to do this more because, in general, one gets a sedative before a general anaesthesia and is envy before and after the anaesthesia and is unsafe. It is completely impossible to run clean before a general anaesthesia, but also not.
You’ll have to be surprised.
Love greeting
And with a gynecological surgery on the chair? With general anesthesia?
As I said, there’s something about the setup and the standard. The easiest and safest way to get up to the chair is of course. Relocating someone in anesthesia would be more risky.
Greeting
The latter is certainly not the case. They already make the whole relatively human.