therecord.com— Dr. Timothy Wallace, the oral surgeon performing the extraction, said the tragedy that occurred in his office is "once in a lifetime." It was certainly once in the teen's lifetime.
Jul 11, 2007View in Crawl 4
Conscious sedation without an anesthesiologist present is actually MUCH more risky than general anesthesia. Obviously not in this particular case. Of course general anesthesia is not without risk.Anesthesiologist are trained to deal with the full spectrum of consciousness. When performing conscious sedation, there is always the possibility that a patient may pass into such a deep state of sedation that they are no longer able to "protect" their airway. That is they either stop breathing, or the pharyngeal muscles cannot hold the airway open (obstruction). If an anesthesiologist is present, this potential crisis can usually be easily dealt with. If not, you life is in danger.
No but they do have a sweet setup with recliners, free goodies, and all the basic cable you can watch. They happen to have WiFi as well...and I'm getting paid 400 dollars for all my troubles.
If it's a verb, it's practise (eg "I practise piano every day").If it's a noun, it's practice (eg "The doctor's practice").However, in the American variation of English, the word is always practice for both nouns and verbs. Everywhere else though the above rule applies.
confelicityJul 12, 2007
what the f**k does that have to do with anything?
inspecalityJul 13, 2007
I just had mine done 2 days ago.
Closed AccountJul 13, 2007
err... ignore this
Closed AccountJul 13, 2007
I've always wanted Kermit to perform maxillofacial surgery on me.
Closed AccountJul 13, 2007
Why is this still a top story?
juano11Jul 13, 2007
Conscious sedation without an anesthesiologist present is actually MUCH more risky than general anesthesia. Obviously not in this particular case. Of course general anesthesia is not without risk.Anesthesiologist are trained to deal with the full spectrum of consciousness. When performing conscious sedation, there is always the possibility that a patient may pass into such a deep state of sedation that they are no longer able to "protect" their airway. That is they either stop breathing, or the pharyngeal muscles cannot hold the airway open (obstruction). If an anesthesiologist is present, this potential crisis can usually be easily dealt with. If not, you life is in danger.
cw1242Jul 14, 2007
No but they do have a sweet setup with recliners, free goodies, and all the basic cable you can watch. They happen to have WiFi as well...and I'm getting paid 400 dollars for all my troubles.
yatti420Aug 14, 2007
lol... I agree.. Local does nothing for an op like dis... The after effects are pretty strong.. I had all teeth out - same place as my buddy.
accelerationSep 8, 2007
If it's a verb, it's practise (eg "I practise piano every day").If it's a noun, it's practice (eg "The doctor's practice").However, in the American variation of English, the word is always practice for both nouns and verbs. Everywhere else though the above rule applies.
pubphaDec 13, 2007
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