I learn something new every day, and if it’s really interesting, I like to share it. I did not know that your body still feels pain and stress when you’re under anesthesia. Indeed, anesthetic drugs are paired with painkillers and muscle relaxers — otherwise you’d be jumping around on the table.
Anesthesia Is Not Sleep
A lot of people think anesthesia is just “deep sleep,” but that’s not true. Under general anesthesia, there are no dreams, no floating thoughts, no sense of time passing. Your brain waves look nothing like natural sleep.
Here’s what it feels like: one moment you’re awake, and the next you’re awake again — as if nothing happened in between. The way you drift off is often the same way you come back, which is why the compassion of the surgical team matters. The voices you hear, the reassurance they give — it sets the tone for how you’ll wake up.
The Body Still Fights Back
Even when the brain is shut down, the body reacts to surgery. Movements, flinches, and stress responses can happen. That’s why anesthesiologists often use paralytic medications to keep you still.
But paralysis doesn’t silence the body’s stress response. During surgery, your system releases adrenaline (epinephrine), cortisol, and other stress hormones. These can drive your blood pressure through the roof and put a heavy load on your heart.
This is one reason surgery is always stressful for the body. If you have heart problems — or even suspect you might — you need to tell your doctor. You don’t want to discover a hidden condition on the operating table. Heart attacks during surgery do happen.
The ASA Physical Status Classification
Not every patient is considered safe for office-based surgery. That’s where the ASA Classification, created by the American Society of Anesthesiologists, comes in:
- ASA I – A completely healthy patient.
- ASA II – A patient with a controlled condition, like high blood pressure or well-managed diabetes.
- ASA III – A patient with uncontrolled systemic disease (uncontrolled diabetes, hypertension, or heart disease).
Office-based surgery is not performed on ASA III patients.
- ASA IV – Severe systemic disease that’s a constant threat to life.
- ASA V – A patient who will not survive without surgery.
- ASA VI – A patient declared brain-dead, undergoing organ donation.
For safety, only ASA I and ASA II patients are cleared for surgery in office settings. Anyone with higher risks needs the resources of a hospital environment.
Now, folks, if you ever thought surgery was just a matter of going to sleep and waking up patched up — you’ve been sold a fairy tale. The truth is closer to a high-stakes poker game: your brain steps out of the room, your body keeps playing, and the dealer is stress itself.
That’s why the people watching over you matter. An anesthesiologist isn’t just a doctor with a bag of drugs — they’re the calm voice that guides you through the scariest nap you’ll ever take. And when your heart’s on the line, you’d best hope the folks holding the cards are both skillful and kind.
Because in the end, anesthesia isn’t about sleep. It’s about trust — trust in medicine, trust in the team, and trust that when you close your eyes, you’ll get the chance to open them again.
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