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anesthesia

noun

  1. state of medically controlled temporary loss of sensation or awareness
  2. medical speciality that focuses on anaesthetics and perioperative medicine
L29652 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˌæn.əsˈθiːz.i.ə/ / /ˌæn.əsˈθi.ʒə/ / /ˌæn.əsˈti.ʒə/

noun

Etymology: Sense of “insensibility” attested since 1679, from New Latin anaesthēsia, from Ancient Greek ἀναισθησία (anaisthēsía, “without sensation”), from ἀν- (an-, “not”) and αἴσθησις (aísthēsis, “sensation”). By surface analysis, an- + -esthesia. Sense of “state induced by an agent” attested since 1846.

  1. An artificial method of preventing sensation, used to eliminate pain without causing loss of vital functions, by the administration of one or more agents which block pain impulses before transmitted to the brain.

    In addition, 0.5 ml of 1% lidocaine HCl was injected subcutaneously in the postauricular area for local anesthesia.

  2. The loss or prevention of sensation, as caused by anesthesia (in the above sense), or by a lesion in the nervous system, or by another physical abnormality.

    In some individuals optimism may become quasi-pathological. The capacity for even a transient sadness or a momentary humility seems cut off from them as by a kind of congenital anæsthesia.

  3. A medication that provides the service of temporarily blocking sensation.
anesthesia — meaning, definition (noun) · Vinony