Was lost in the maze that is Wikipedia when I happened to wander into the local anesthetic article which reminded me of a bad experience I had once.
I was getting a bone set in my hand and when it came time for the local anesthetic I was a tad nervous because of a dislike of needles (bad luck as a kid, one too many nurses who apparently weren't very good at finding veins when I had Kawasaki disease.) Not ever having had a local anesthetic before I assumed it wouldn't be any worse than any other shot, just a pin-prick of pain if even that and no big deal, so I just tried to relax and try to ignore the procedure. Unfortunately that became rather difficult as the doctor began injecting the anesthetic: the best way I can describe it was that it felt as if he was pushing the whole hypodermic needle, syringe, and his arm through my hand, along with a gallon of buring gasoline mixed in with it. I suppose I should have suspected it wasn't going to be too comforatable when the nurse was helping him hold my hand and arm in place before he begain, but this caught me rather by surprise. I just sat there and said "ouch" along with a few other words while waiting for my hand to explode or whatever, but of course it ended pretty quickly and soon the only thing I could feel while the boxer's fracture was being set was the ends of the bones crunching together, a very odd sensation indeed. It was bad enough that I'd strongly consider asking the doctor about if just going sans-anesthesia was acceptable.
Anyways, I was just curious if that's typical for local anesthesia, or what?
I was getting a bone set in my hand and when it came time for the local anesthetic I was a tad nervous because of a dislike of needles (bad luck as a kid, one too many nurses who apparently weren't very good at finding veins when I had Kawasaki disease.) Not ever having had a local anesthetic before I assumed it wouldn't be any worse than any other shot, just a pin-prick of pain if even that and no big deal, so I just tried to relax and try to ignore the procedure. Unfortunately that became rather difficult as the doctor began injecting the anesthetic: the best way I can describe it was that it felt as if he was pushing the whole hypodermic needle, syringe, and his arm through my hand, along with a gallon of buring gasoline mixed in with it. I suppose I should have suspected it wasn't going to be too comforatable when the nurse was helping him hold my hand and arm in place before he begain, but this caught me rather by surprise. I just sat there and said "ouch" along with a few other words while waiting for my hand to explode or whatever, but of course it ended pretty quickly and soon the only thing I could feel while the boxer's fracture was being set was the ends of the bones crunching together, a very odd sensation indeed. It was bad enough that I'd strongly consider asking the doctor about if just going sans-anesthesia was acceptable.
Anyways, I was just curious if that's typical for local anesthesia, or what?
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