
By
PREFACE
The Induction of Anesthesia.
Cardiac Collapse.
Respiratory Collapse.
When Shall the Patient be Declared Ready for Operation?
Maintenance of the Surgical Plane of Anesthesia.
Some Important Reflexes.
Vomiting During Anesthesia.
Obstructed Breathing.
A concise, hands‑on guide to early 20th‑century anesthesia, this work walks listeners through the fundamentals of using chloroform, ether, and the combined agent anaesthol. Beginning with a step‑by‑step description of the Schimmelbusch mask and the drop‑method of administration, it shows how a careful, gradual induction can keep patients comfortable while the practitioner maintains strict silence and focus.
The author then expands to cover essential pre‑operative preparation—such as a small dose of morphine given half an hour before narcosis—and the signs that indicate a patient is ready for surgery. Practical advice on recognizing and managing early complications like cardiac or respiratory collapse, reflex responses, and vomiting is presented alongside guidance on maintaining the surgical plane, using breathing tubes, and safely awakening the patient. Listeners will come away with a clear picture of the systematic approach that shaped modern anesthetic practice.
Language
en
Duration
~42 minutes (40K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2016-10-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
A surgeon and early medical writer, he published clear, practical guidance for doctors at a time when anesthesia was still developing into a modern specialty. His work reflects the hands-on, problem-solving spirit of early 20th-century medicine.
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