Morning Overview on MSN
Brains under anesthesia are still processing words and sounds — and patients have no memory of it afterward
When you go under general anesthesia, you vanish. The surgeon speaks, monitors beep, nurses call out vitals, and you remember ...
A study of people who underwent surgery to treat epilepsy suggests the hippocampus may process words and speech when people ...
Baylor College of Medicine researchers have found that the human brain is capable of sophisticated language processing while ...
The question of anesthesia's impact on brain development has nagged the field for decades, with negative preclinical and animal model data but little conclusive evidence in humans. Young children ...
Increased exposure to general anesthesia during surgical procedures is associated with long-term decline in executive function, selective attention and mental speed, and information processing speed.
Experts report that modern anesthesia supports calm, controlled recovery rather than dramatic or unusual reactions.
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