What are the name of adjectives anesthesia medication?

I believe remesentam. is part of the medication

Answers:
I'm an anesthesiologist. The drug you index is not familiar to me. The closest I can suggest of is remifentanil (a narcotic). or romazicon (reversal agent)

We use different drugs for different things.

For general anesthesia, we use a drug to catch people bad to sleep (induction) - common induction agents are propofol, etomidate, pentothal, ketamine. To hang on to people asleep, we usually use inhalation anesthetics, such as isoflurane, desflurane, sevoflurane, possibly near nitrous oxide. We may also use a paralyzing agent such as succinylcholine, rocuronium, vecuronium, atracurium, cisatracurium or pancuronium. For pain nouns, we typically use a narcotic such as fentanyl, morphine, hydrocodone, alfentanil, or sufentanil. Many patients also get midazolam, which is a soporific and amnestic.

For neuraxial (spinal/epidural) regional (nerve blocks) or local anesthetics, we use drugs called "local anesthetics". Common local anesthetics are lidocaine, procaine, bupivicaine, tetracaine, chloroprocaine (pretty much anything that ends contained by "caine" is a local anesthetic)

Patients may also get drugs to prevent nausea, reverse the paralyzing agents, make higher or lower blood pressure or heart rate, or treat anything else that might come up.

Hope that helps.

(Many of the drugs programmed by "The Nurse" are not anesthetic drugs, but may be given in the perioperative term; some of the anesthetic drugs that are listed are no longer used)
Here are some adjectives anaesthetics:
nitrous oxide
ethoxyethane
trichlorometane
cyclopropane
halothane

hope that helps
lidocaine,xylocaine,lignocaine. is given by the nurse that ondansetron etc are used ,but this are not anaesthetics,they are pre anaesthethic medication.anaesthetics are mainly local and common .local acts locally,does not own any effect on the CNS,while general anaesthetics close to the thiopentone have cns depressing distraction
Ketamine's one, but that's a different drug. kind of an alternative to morphine.
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