Re: [FairfieldLife] 'Conscious Sedation'
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wrote : Fleetwood, if the pain gets bad, I recommend Xpress PowerStrips. I had shooting pains in my ear last week. They were gone after a few hours of the patch applied simply near to the ear. This is what is supposedly in these little units. If you go online you can also become a dealer/rep/seller of said product. …Germanium-based far-infrared (this is what brings the heat to the pain area) …Korean red ginseng (known to improve cognitive function, manage pain and stress, improve the immune system) …Marine phytoplankton (one of the purest forms of nutrition found on the planet – found on Vancouver Island) …Silver (packed with anti-microbial agents that fight infections)
Re: [FairfieldLife] 'Conscious Sedation'
The doc was clean - almost no pain today, though I have backup. Also doing antibiotics. ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wrote : Fleetwood, if the pain gets bad, I recommend Xpress PowerStrips. I had shooting pains in my ear last week. They were gone after a few hours of the patch applied simply near to the ear. From: "fleetwood_macncheese@... [FairfieldLife]" To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 8:07 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] 'Conscious Sedation' No, it isn't the latest single by Paris Hilton. This is what the state of consciousness (SOC) is called, that I experienced, during my recent dental visit (two crowns and a root canal). It begins with me taking two different sedative-hypnotics, an hour before the procedures, in the morning, on an empty stomach. My wife drove me down to the oral surgery office. I was immediately led to a chair, and reclined. The doctor came in, quickly gave me four shots of novocaine, into the left side of my mouth, then began sliding an IV into a vein on the top of my hand. I remembered wanting to tell him how it didn't hurt, and then I was ...consciously sedated. The next thing I remember was staring at a large framed screen, like an Etch-A-Sketch, only it filled my vision, and the frame was a mix of art deco and futuristic. The entire thing looked like it had been spray-painted a matte gold. I stared at it a long time (10 minutes? 2 hours?), then hands began reaching into the screen, from the side. They were also colored gold. The perspective was like having eyes down my throat, looking up. I continued to come to, slowly, and could follow voice requests, to, "open wider". I was aware enough to determine linearity of my experience, but that was all. Afterwards, the doc said I fell asleep and was actually snoring. In addition, the hypnotics prevent the brain from forming memory pathways during the experience, so I literally have very, very little memory of an over three hour procedure. It happens again in a week, for the right side, sans root canal, thank God. PS It has been raining buckets all day long.
Re: [FairfieldLife] 'Conscious Sedation'
Fleetwood, if the pain gets bad, I recommend Xpress PowerStrips. I had shooting pains in my ear last week. They were gone after a few hours of the patch applied simply near to the ear. From: "fleetwood_macnche...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]" To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 8:07 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] 'Conscious Sedation' No, it isn't the latest single by Paris Hilton. This is what the state of consciousness (SOC) is called, that I experienced, during my recent dental visit (two crowns and a root canal). It begins with me taking two different sedative-hypnotics, an hour before the procedures, in the morning, on an empty stomach. My wife drove me down to the oral surgery office. I was immediately led to a chair, and reclined. The doctor came in, quickly gave me four shots of novocaine, into the left side of my mouth, then began sliding an IV into a vein on the top of my hand. I remembered wanting to tell him how it didn't hurt, and then I was ...consciously sedated. The next thing I remember was staring at a large framed screen, like an Etch-A-Sketch, only it filled my vision, and the frame was a mix of art deco and futuristic. The entire thing looked like it had been spray-painted a matte gold. I stared at it a long time (10 minutes? 2 hours?), then hands began reaching into the screen, from the side. They were also colored gold. The perspective was like having eyes down my throat, looking up. I continued to come to, slowly, and could follow voice requests, to, "open wider". I was aware enough to determine linearity of my experience, but that was all. Afterwards, the doc said I fell asleep and was actually snoring. In addition, the hypnotics prevent the brain from forming memory pathways during the experience, so I literally have very, very little memory of an over three hour procedure. It happens again in a week, for the right side, sans root canal, thank God. PS It has been raining buckets all day long.
[FairfieldLife] 'Conscious Sedation'
No, it isn't the latest single by Paris Hilton. This is what the state of consciousness (SOC) is called, that I experienced, during my recent dental visit (two crowns and a root canal). It begins with me taking two different sedative-hypnotics, an hour before the procedures, in the morning, on an empty stomach. My wife drove me down to the oral surgery office. I was immediately led to a chair, and reclined. The doctor came in, quickly gave me four shots of novocaine, into the left side of my mouth, then began sliding an IV into a vein on the top of my hand. I remembered wanting to tell him how it didn't hurt, and then I was ...consciously sedated. The next thing I remember was staring at a large framed screen, like an Etch-A-Sketch, only it filled my vision, and the frame was a mix of art deco and futuristic. The entire thing looked like it had been spray-painted a matte gold. I stared at it a long time (10 minutes? 2 hours?), then hands began reaching into the screen, from the side. They were also colored gold. The perspective was like having eyes down my throat, looking up. I continued to come to, slowly, and could follow voice requests, to, "open wider". I was aware enough to determine linearity of my experience, but that was all. Afterwards, the doc said I fell asleep and was actually snoring. In addition, the hypnotics prevent the brain from forming memory pathways during the experience, so I literally have very, very little memory of an over three hour procedure. It happens again in a week, for the right side, sans root canal, thank God. PS It has been raining buckets all day long.