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Definition of Intravenous anesthetic
1. Noun. An anesthetic that produces anesthesia when injected into the circulatory system.
Specialized synonyms: Dibucaine, Tribromoethanol, Tribromoethyl Alcohol, Truth Drug, Truth Serum
Lexicographical Neighbors of Intravenous Anesthetic
Literary usage of Intravenous anesthetic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Golden Rules of Surgery: Especially Intended for Students, General by Augustus Charles Bernays, William Thomas Coughlin (1913)
"A properly done first treatment will save time, and likely function of the part.
I use the Ether Rausch or intravenous anesthetic, as seems best adapted to ..."
2. Materia Medica: Pharmacology, Therapeutics and Prescription Writing for by Walter Arthur Bastedo (1918)
"It has been used as an intravenous anesthetic, Fedoroff (1910) reporting 330 cases.
Page (1912) recommends a solution of 0.75 per cent, in normal saline ..."
3. The Dog: Bibliography January 1985-January 1994 by Cynthia P. Smith (1995)
"... Abstract: Chloralose is an intravenous anesthetic which preserves vagal and
central baroreceptor reflexes, thus rendering it useful for physiologic ..."
4. Materia medica (1918)
"It has been used as an intravenous anesthetic, Fedoroff (1910) reporting 330 cases.
Page (1912) recommends a solution of 0.75 per cent. in normal saline ..."
5. Drugs of Abuseedited by Carol Gibson edited by Carol Gibson (1997)
"Fentanyl - First synthesized in Belgium in the late 1950s, fentanyl was introduced
into clinical practice in the 1960s as an intravenous anesthetic under ..."