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Definition of Inhalation anesthetic
1. Noun. A gas that produces general anesthesia when inhaled.
Specialized synonyms: Chloroform, Trichloromethane, Cyclopropane, Diethyl Ether, Divinyl Ether, Ether, Ethoxyethane, Ethyl Ether, Vinyl Ether, Halothane, Isoflurane, Laughing Gas, Nitrous Oxide
Generic synonyms: General Anaesthetic, General Anesthetic
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inhalation Anesthetic
Literary usage of Inhalation anesthetic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Surgical Shock and the Shockless Operation Through Anoci-association by George Washington Crile, William Edgar Lower (1920)
"We may conclude, therefore, that while the brain-cell changes resulting from a
surgical operation are not markedly due to the inhalation anesthetic per se, ..."
2. The Modern Materia Medica: The Source, Chemical and Physical Properties (1911)
"It should not be confounded with the following inhalation anesthetic. ...
and relatively safe inhalation anesthetic, usually without untoward after-effect. ..."
3. Anoci-association by George Washington Crile (1914)
"We may conclude, therefore, that while the brain-cell changes resulting from a
surgical operation are not due to the inhalation anesthetic per se, ..."
4. Surgery, Its Principles and Practice by William Williams Keen (1913)
"The value of any inhalation anesthetic may be ascertained by the following tests:
As compared with ether, is it safer? Does it enable the surgeon to do his ..."
5. Therapeutic Gazette (1921)
"He concluded, therefore, that while the brain-cell changes resulting from a
surgical operation are not due to the inhalation anesthetic per se, ..."
6. A Manual of Pharmacology and Its Applications to Therapeutics and Toxicology by Torald Hermann Sollmann (1922)
"The two alkaloids used together produce a deeper anesthesia with a given
concentration of inhalation anesthetic (Ludewig, 1913). ..."
7. Squibb's Materia Medica by E.R. Squibb & Sons (1906)
"inhalation anesthetic, Nerve Sedative; used mainly in minor surgery. Dose: by
inhalation, 150 to 300 minims (10 to 20 Co.); internally, 5 to 10 drops, ..."
8. A Text-book on the practice of gynecology: For Practitioners and Students by William Easterly Ashton (1916)
"He holds that ether or chloroform do not protect the brain from noci influences
to the same degree as nitrous-oxid-oxygen, and that no inhalation anesthetic ..."