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General anesthetics

What are General anesthetics?

General anesthetics are medicines that render a patient reversibly unconscious and unresponsive in order to allow surgeons to operate on that patient. General anesthetics are normally administered intravenously or by inhalation by a specialist doctor called an anesthetist who also monitors the patient's vital signs (breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, temperature) during the procedure. While under general anesthesia, a patient is unable to feel pain and will likely wake with some short-term amnesia (memory loss). Experts are unsure exactly how general anesthetics work.

List of General anesthetics

View by  Brand | Generic
Drug Name Avg. Rating Reviews
methoxyflurane systemic
10
1 review
methohexital systemic
10
2 reviews
propofol systemic (Pro)
7.6
409 reviews
etomidate systemic (Pro)
6.0
2 reviews
ketamine systemic (Pro)
5.4
157 reviews
sevoflurane systemic (Pro)
No reviews
nitrous oxide systemic
No reviews
isoflurane systemic (Pro)
No reviews
halothane systemic
No reviews
fospropofol systemic
No reviews
desflurane systemic (Pro)
No reviews
For ratings, users were asked how effective they found the medicine while considering positive/adverse effects and ease of use (1 = not effective, 10 = most effective).

See also

Medical conditions treated or associated with general anesthetics:

Further information

Always consult your healthcare provider to ensure the information displayed on this page applies to your personal circumstances.