The standard of practice is to wake them up once or twice a day, and to try to get the patient up and walking as soon as possible, and to avoid all these neuro-active drugs if at all possible. Richard Barton: The only thing that I would have to say is that if you're still using benzodiazepines, don't.
There are really better ways to sedate people, more safe ways to sedate people. You can still deliver all the sedation you need, but at the same time minimize some of the complications associated with sedation and with mechanical ventilation.
Announcer: Have a question about a medical procedure? Want to learn more about a health condition? Check it out at TheScopeRadio. Subscribe to Our e-Newsletter. Find a doctor or location close to you so you can get the health care you need, when you need it. Barton, what is the problem that you're concerned with?
Interviewer: Very uncomfortable, I bet. Richard Barton: Yes. Interviewer: What can you tell us about the sedatives that are commonly used in the ICU? Interviewer: And do you have anything to add to that? For Patients Find a doctor or location close to you so you can get the health care you need, when you need it.
Subscribe to The Scope Radio. Conscious sedation is a combination of medicines to help you relax a sedative and to block pain an anesthetic during a medical or dental procedure. You will probably stay awake, but may not be able to speak. Conscious sedation lets you recover quickly and return to your everyday activities soon after your procedure.
A nurse, doctor, or dentist, will give you conscious sedation in the hospital or outpatient clinic. Most of the time, it will not be an anesthesiologist. The medicine will wear off quickly, so it is used for short, uncomplicated procedures. You may receive the medicine through an intravenous line IV, in a vein or a shot into a muscle.
You will begin to feel drowsy and relaxed very quickly. If your doctor gives you the medicine to swallow, you will feel the effects after about 30 to 60 minutes. Your breathing will slow and your blood pressure may drop a little. Your health care provider will monitor you during the procedure to make sure you are OK. This provider will stay with you at all times during the procedure.
You should not need help with your breathing. But you may receive extra oxygen through a mask or IV fluids through a catheter tube into a vein. You may fall asleep, but you will wake up easily to respond to people in the room. You may be able to respond to verbal cues.
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