If I had to be awake for a surgery, I think this would also help me avoid freaking out regardless of pain. If I'm semi-aware of what's happening to me, my brain goes places and I am likely to have a mini panic attack...simple things like a local injection of anesthetic for a mole Biopsy is enough to make me want to pass out. Texting someone or doing something "normal" would be rather comforting I think, if only to keep my mind on something else.
"texting someone on a mobile phone during a minor surgical procedure done under local anesthetic can reduce significantly a patient’s demand for narcotic pain relief."
The mention of local anesthetic confuses me. If it's correctly used, I'm assuming the "minor surgery" should be a theoretically painless procedure. So texting isn't reducing the severity of actual pain the brain is receiving (which should be "none"), but the patient's own anxiety which might produce feelings of pain?
Yes, I realize that the brain can interpret anxiety and emotional pain as just as "real" as other types of pain, but the article seems misleading, if that's the case, and these procedures shouldn't have been producing physical pain.
It's unclear to me from the article and linked abstract (and the paper is paywalled) just what kind of minor procedures they mean, but it could be something where a topical anesthetic can be applied but there would still be active internal nerves, like a biopsy of something internal. For things like that, not needing narcotic anesthetic would reduce risk of side effects and also make things much more convenient -- e.g., patients could leave under their own supervision.
Having undergone my fair share of surgeries with local anesthetics (a few general ones too), I can definitely vouch for the physical pain. I have to admit however that it wasn't directly in the targeted area, but rather in the surrounding area.
One example, I had surgery done around my cheek-bone area and one of the tools they used was some sort of soldering iron. The heat propagating and the pretty drastic changes in skin tension were absolutely noticeable and painful. They asked me right before the surgery if I wanted drugs to help but decided against it. Instead, I ended up talking to the staff throughout the entire surgery, got them to explain what they were doing and, perhaps surprisingly, it was a very pleasant experience overall. The distraction definitely helps with the pain.
Another example, I went through a number of inner ear surgeries. One of the tools they use produces an insanely strident noise, designed in part to expand your eardrum to its limits (IIRC). Even with the local anesthetic, it felt like somebody was drilling through my head. I can't quite describe the pain, but it's the worst thing I've ever had to go through (many times at that). I doubt that sheer anxiety could produce this level of physical pain.
So from my admittedly anecdotal evidence, I would tend to agree with the article.
I've had only a couple of instances of anaesthetic application - minor leg surgery and dental work. But in both cases I was in a degree of pain.
The leg surgery was vein removal, the pain of the failure of a heated catheter to get past one of my venous valves (causing the retreat to using evulsions - which had some "burning" pain [like strong nettle sting] associated with it). There was also non-pain sensation that wasn't pleasant to focus on - the feeling of the scalpel being inserted and the blood running down my leg whilst not painful didn't exactly make me feel settled.
Mind you I couldn't have texted whilst doing that as I was too busy slowly passing out whilst describing the process to a theatre nurse ...
behold the power of dopamine (and active Internet communication - chat/email/texting/comments on the likes of HN/Reddit, etc.. - is almost the second best thing after methamphetamine-s to get the dopamine spiking in your system :)
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 12.4 ms ] threadIf I had to be awake for a surgery, I think this would also help me avoid freaking out regardless of pain. If I'm semi-aware of what's happening to me, my brain goes places and I am likely to have a mini panic attack...simple things like a local injection of anesthetic for a mole Biopsy is enough to make me want to pass out. Texting someone or doing something "normal" would be rather comforting I think, if only to keep my mind on something else.
The mention of local anesthetic confuses me. If it's correctly used, I'm assuming the "minor surgery" should be a theoretically painless procedure. So texting isn't reducing the severity of actual pain the brain is receiving (which should be "none"), but the patient's own anxiety which might produce feelings of pain?
Yes, I realize that the brain can interpret anxiety and emotional pain as just as "real" as other types of pain, but the article seems misleading, if that's the case, and these procedures shouldn't have been producing physical pain.
One example, I had surgery done around my cheek-bone area and one of the tools they used was some sort of soldering iron. The heat propagating and the pretty drastic changes in skin tension were absolutely noticeable and painful. They asked me right before the surgery if I wanted drugs to help but decided against it. Instead, I ended up talking to the staff throughout the entire surgery, got them to explain what they were doing and, perhaps surprisingly, it was a very pleasant experience overall. The distraction definitely helps with the pain.
Another example, I went through a number of inner ear surgeries. One of the tools they use produces an insanely strident noise, designed in part to expand your eardrum to its limits (IIRC). Even with the local anesthetic, it felt like somebody was drilling through my head. I can't quite describe the pain, but it's the worst thing I've ever had to go through (many times at that). I doubt that sheer anxiety could produce this level of physical pain.
So from my admittedly anecdotal evidence, I would tend to agree with the article.
The leg surgery was vein removal, the pain of the failure of a heated catheter to get past one of my venous valves (causing the retreat to using evulsions - which had some "burning" pain [like strong nettle sting] associated with it). There was also non-pain sensation that wasn't pleasant to focus on - the feeling of the scalpel being inserted and the blood running down my leg whilst not painful didn't exactly make me feel settled.
Mind you I couldn't have texted whilst doing that as I was too busy slowly passing out whilst describing the process to a theatre nurse ...
Anaesthetic isn't an exact science is it?