General anesthesia affects your entire body and renders you
unconscious. Under anesthesia, you should be completely unaware and not feel
pain during the surgery or procedure. General anesthesia also causes
forgetfulness (amnesia) and relaxation of the muscles throughout your
body.
General anesthesia suppresses many of your body’s normal automatic
functions, such as those that control breathing, heartbeat, circulation of the
blood (such as blood pressure), movements of the digestive system, and throat
reflexes such as swallowing, coughing, or gagging that prevent foreign material
from being inhaled into your lungs (aspiration).
Because these functions are suppressed, an
anesthesia specialist must carefully maintain a
balance of medications while monitoring your heart, breathing, blood pressure,
and other vital functions. An
endotracheal (ET) tube or a laryngeal mask airway is
usually used to give an inhalant anesthetic and oxygen, control and assist
breathing. An ET tube is used to prevent aspiration.
General anesthesia is commonly begun (induced) with
intravenous (IV) anesthetics, but inhalation agents
also may be used. Once you are unconscious, anesthesia may be maintained with
an inhalant anesthetic alone, with a combination of intravenous anesthetics, or
a combination of the two.