The word anaesthesia—means WITHOUT FEELING. This describes
accurately the
effect of
ether in the anaesthetic dosage. Although there is no pain felt during operations when anaesthesia is inhaled, the *
nerve impulses excited by a
surgical operation still reaches the
brain. Not every
portion of the
brain is fully anesthetized, since
surgical anaesthesia does not kill and this allows the
nerve impulses to reach the
brain. This gives rise to the question : What will be the
effect of
trauma upon the part of the that remains awake? If in
surgical anaesthesia, the
traumatic impulses
cause an excitation of the wide-awake cells, how are the
remainder of the cells of the
brain, despite anaesthesia,
affected? Also, are they prevented by the anaesthesia from expressing that
influence of
nerve stimulus in
conscious perception or in
muscular action. Whether the ANESTHETIZED cells are influenced or not must be
determined by noting the physiologic functions of the body after anaesthesia has worn off. This can be done in animals by an
examination of the
brain-cells. The
effect of Anaesthesia on the vasomotor, the
cardiac, and the
respiratory centers discharging
energy in
response to
traumatic stimuli applied to
various sensitive regions of the body during
surgical anaesthesia have long been known. If the
trauma is more,
exhaustion of the
entire brain will be observed after the
effect of the anaesthesia has worn off. In
spite of the
complete paralysis of
voluntary motion and the loss of
consciousness due to
ether, the
traumatic impulses that are known to reach the AWAKE centers in the medulla also reach and
influence every other part of the
brain. The
functional depression which is a
consequence of the morphologic alterations seen in the
brain-cells may be due to the low blood-pressure which follows
excessive trauma is shown by the experiments. The
circulation of animals was first rendered STATIC by over-transfusion, and was controlled by a
continuous blood-pressure
record on a drum. In each of the instances, morphologic changes in the cells of all parts of the
brain were found, but it required much more
trauma to
produce brain-
cell changes in animals whose blood-pressure was kept at the
normal level than in the animals whose blood-pressure was allowed to take a downward course. In the cortex and in the
cerebellum, the changes in the
brain-cells were in every
instance more
marked than in the medulla.