Anesthetic allergy: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "<html><div class="mw-content-ltr" dir="ltr" id="mw-content-text" lang="en"><p>Typically speaking, <b><a href="/index.php?title=Anesthetic" title="Anesthetic">anesthetic</a> allergies</b> are extremely rare (although adverse reactions to <a href="/index.php?title=Lidocaine" title="Lidocaine">lidocaine</a> are not at all rare). However, because most "underground practitioners" are working without the support of resuscitation equipment, it should still be taken very serious...") |
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Typically speaking, '''[[Anesthetic|anesthetic allergies]]''' are extremely rare (although adverse reactions to [[Lidocaine|lidocaine]] are not at all rare). However, because most "underground practitioners" are working without the support of resuscitation equipment, it should still be taken very seriously. | |||
In addition, it's often not actually the anesthetic itself that's being reacted to—there are many other active compounds in the solution. It could just as easily be a reaction to the preservative methylparaben (chemically similar to paraminobenzoic acid), or to the [[Metabisulfite|metabisulfite]] (which you'll find in anesthetic solutions with [[Epinephrine|epinephrine]]). | |||
Latest revision as of 23:37, 16 September 2023
Typically speaking, anesthetic allergies are extremely rare (although adverse reactions to lidocaine are not at all rare). However, because most "underground practitioners" are working without the support of resuscitation equipment, it should still be taken very seriously.
In addition, it's often not actually the anesthetic itself that's being reacted to—there are many other active compounds in the solution. It could just as easily be a reaction to the preservative methylparaben (chemically similar to paraminobenzoic acid), or to the metabisulfite (which you'll find in anesthetic solutions with epinephrine).