One of the most frequent questions I hear from patients before surgery is, “How long will it take me to wake up from general anesthesia?”
The answer is, “It depends.” It depends on:
- What drugs the anesthesia provider uses
- How long your surgery lasts
- How healthy, how old, and how slender you are
- What type of surgery you are having
- The skill level of your anesthesia provider
In best circumstances you’ll be awake and talking within 5 to 10 minutes from the time your anesthesia provider turns off the anesthetic. Let’s look at each of the five factors above.
- WHAT DRUGS THE ANESTHETIST USES. The effects of modern anesthetic drugs wear off fast.
- The most common intravenous anesthetic hypnotic drug is propofol. Propofol levels in your blood drop quickly after administration of the drug is terminated, resulting in rapid awakening.
- The most common inhaled anesthetic drugs are sevoflurane, desflurane, and nitrous oxide. Each of these gases are exhaled from the body quickly after their administration is terminated, resulting in rapid awakening.
- The most commonly used intravenous narcotic is fentanyl. Fentanyl levels in your blood drop quickly after administration of the drug is terminated, resulting in rapid awakening.
- The most commonly used intravenous anti-anxiety drug is midazolam (Versed). Midazolam levels in your blood drop quickly after administration of the drug is terminated, resulting in rapid awakening.
- HOW LONG YOUR SURGERY LASTS
- The shorter your surgery lasts, the less injectable and inhaled drugs you will receive.
- Lower doses and shorter exposure times to anesthetic drugs lead to a faster wake up time.
- HOW HEALTHY, HOW OLD, AND HOW SLENDER YOU ARE
- Healthy patients with fit hearts, lungs, and brains wake up sooner
- Young patients wake up quicker than geriatric patients
- Slender patients wake up quicker than very obese patients
- WHAT TYPE OF SURGERY YOU ARE HAVING
- A minor surgery with minimal post-operative pain, such a hammertoe repair or a tendon repair on your thumb, will lead to a faster wake up.
- A complex surgery such as an open-heart procedure or a liver transplant will lead to a slower wake up.
- THE SKILL LEVEL OF YOUR ANESTHETIST
- Like any profession, the longer the duration of time a practitioner has rehearsed his or her art, the better they will perform. An experienced pilot is likely to perform smoother landings of his aircraft than a novice. An experienced anesthesiologist is likely to wake up his or her patients more quickly than a novice.
- There are multiple possible recipes or techniques for an anesthetic plan for any given surgery. An advantageous recipe may include local anesthesia into the surgical site or a regional anesthetic block to minimize post-operative pain, rather than administering higher doses of intravenous narcotics or sedatives which can prolong wake up times. Experienced anesthesia providers develop reliable time-tested recipes for rapid wake ups.
- Although I can’t site any data, I believe the additional training and experience of a board-certified anesthesiologist physician is an advantage over the training and experience of a certified nurse anesthetist.
EXAMPLE TIMELINE FOR A MORNING SURGERY
Let’s say you’re scheduled to have your gall bladder removed at 7:30 a.m. tomorrow morning. This would be a typical timeline for your day:
6:00 You arrive at the operating room suite. You check in with front desk and nursing staff.
7:00 You meet your anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist. Your anesthesia provider reviews your chart, examines your airway, heart, and lungs, and explains the anesthetic plan and options to you. After you consent, he or she starts an intravenous line in your arm.
7:15 Your anesthesia provider administers intravenous midazolam (Versed) into your IV, and you become more relaxed and sedated within one minute. Your anesthesia provider wheels your gurney into the operating room, and you move yourself from the gurney to the operating room table. Because of the amnestic effect of the midazolam, you probably will not remember any of this.
7:30 Your anesthesia provider induces general anesthesia by injecting intravenous propofol and fentanyl, places a breathing tube into your windpipe, and administers inhaled sevoflurane and intravenous propofol to keep you asleep.
7:40 Your anesthesia provider, your surgeon, and the nurse move your body into optimal position on the operating room table. The nurse preps your skin with antiseptic, and the scrub tech frames your abdomen with sterile paper drapes. The surgeons wash their hands and don sterile gowns and gloves. The nurses prepare the video equipment so the surgeon can see inside your abdomen with a laparoscope during surgery.
8:00 The surgery begins.
8:45 The surgery ends. Your anesthesia provider turns off the anesthetics sevoflurane and propofol.
8:55 You open your eyes, and your anesthesia provider removes the breathing tube from your windpipe.
9:05 Your anesthesia provider transports you to the Post Anesthesia Care Unit (PACU) on the original gurney you started on.
9:10 Your anesthesia provider explains your history to the PACU nurse, who will care for you for the next hour or two. The anesthesia provider then returns to the pre-operative area to meet their next patient. Your anesthesia provider is still responsible for your orders and your medical care until you leave the PACU. He or she is available on cell phone or beeper at all times. No family members are allowed in the PACU.
10:40 You are discharged from the PACU to your inpatient room, or to home if you are fit enough to leave the hospital or surgery center.
TO REVIEW:
- Even though the surgery only lasted 45 minutes, you were in the operating room for one hour and 35 minutes.
- It took you 10 minutes to awaken, from 8:45 to 8:55.
- Even though you were awake and talking at 8:55, you were unlikely to remember anything from that time.
- You probably had no memory of the time from the midazolam administration at 7:15 until after you’d reached in the PACU, when your consciousness level returned toward normal.
Introducing …, THE DOCTOR AND MR. DYLAN, Dr. Novak’s debut novel. Publication date August 31, 2014 by Pegasus Books.
On October 2, 2014 THE DOCTOR AND MR. DYLAN became the world’s #1 bestselling anesthesia Kindle book on Amazon.com.
The first four chapters are available for free at Amazon. Read them and you’ll be hooked! To reach the Amazon webpage, click on the book cover image below:
Stanford professor Dr. Nico Antone leaves the wife he hates and the job he loves to return to Hibbing, Minnesota where he spent his childhood. He believes his son’s best chance to get accepted into a prestigious college is to graduate at the top of his class in this remote Midwestern town. His son becomes a small town hero and academic star, while Dr. Antone befriends Bobby Dylan, a deranged anesthetist who renamed and reinvented himself as a younger version of the iconic rock legend who grew up in Hibbing. An operating room death rocks their world, and Dr. Antone’s family and his relationship to Mr. Dylan are forever changed.
Equal parts legal thriller and medical thriller, The Doctor and Mr. Dylan examines the dark side of relationships between a doctor and his wife, a father and his son, and a man and his best friend. Set in a rural Northern Minnesota world reminiscent of the Coen brothers’ Fargo, The Doctor and Mr. Dylan details scenes of family crises, operating room mishaps, and courtroom confrontation, and concludes in a final twist that will leave readers questioning what is of value in the world we live in.
THE DOCTOR AND MR. DYLAN can be ordered in print or ebook from Amazon.com. To reach the Amazon webpage, click on the book cover image below:
Many of us wind up in hospitals to undergo some procedure or another and our life is in their hands. It was so interesting to read about their side of the story and the effects it all has on them. The influence of friends and family plays a part in all our lives and so often we forget how much help that can be, too. Dr. Novak follows the path that Carol Cassella blazed in the genre of Anesthesiologist authors.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book.
By allan mishra on October 28, 2014
By Maddiepup on October 1, 2014
Learn more about Rick Novak’s fiction writing at
The anesthesiaconsultant.com, copyright 2010, Palo Alto, California
For questions, contact:
rjnov@yahoo.com
Filed under: ANESTHESIA PATIENT QUESTIONS BLOG Tagged: ambulatory anesthesia, Anesthesia, anesthesia blog, anesthesiologist, anesthesiologists, anesthesiology, CRNA, fentanyl, general anesthesia, how long does it take to wake up from anesthesia?, midazolam, nurse anesthetist, propofol, RIchard Novak MD, RIck Novak MD, Sevoflurane, waking up from surgery