2019 Bayer Analgesic (N) Gap AlChemists by CEO of IBM-Labs

Go back in time. Bless the paths that bring any of you there. Re-enact all the issues with their early remedy beginnings. My objective is an emphasis that should modern days be the best – reason to believe something needed bridging in yesterdays methods as they came in. What’s missing. Compare yours with someone else’s – see the difference. Do it their way and now, do it your way always using the same ingredients and + your version.

New Playwrights for Laboratories IBM Global

Settings: Imaginary boundaries. The staff is alive. IBM has not lost one participant in this study to move on from where it began. CheatingSheets – Bayers.

Rules:

All starting ingredients to work on their own.

Thesis – work alone and work as a laboratory then from laboratory to laboratory pass the Bayer CheatSheets. Results of back then. Results of today and how it came about.

In between the modernization of each methods of anasthelgics – what can be added with instruments and why?

Give brief analysis with time, duration of operation and aftermath and post-operative results in expectations and suggested complications should they arise.

Place on my desk. Folder Modern Revision of Anesthelgia.

Requested to commence on June 3, 2019 and to terminate on June 24, 2019 from mild to complicated with levels of difficulties on the surgery part of it and the re-establishment of the said patients.

After giving birth to my second child, I felt that I recuperated faster. I have separated the fact that I was in a hemorrhage frantic state of mind making me separate from the actual birth to weakness in articulation and bodily functions. I would have been able to give the perfect 8 in pain right now and less to lesser as days went by compared to local which lasted (for me) more than 6 weeks due to another ordeal.

 

 

Analgizer Thesis

Early anesthesia can be traced back to ancient times (Babylonians, Greeks, Chinese and Incas), but one of the first European accounts occurred in the 1200s when Theodoric of Lucca, an Italian physician and bishop,  “used sponges soaked with opium and mandragora [from the mandrake plant] for surgical pain relief,” according to Britain’s History of Anaethesia Society (www.histansoc.org.uk/). Hashish and Indian hemp were also commonly used as painkillers.

Up until the mid-1800s, however, surgeons could not offer patients much more than opium, alcohol or a bullet to bite on to deal with the agonizing pain of surgery. Britain’s Daily Mail describes medicine during the U.S. Civil War as a grisly ordeal. “A blood-curdling range of saws, knives and sharp hooks were used to administer much-needed surgery to maimed fighters,” the paper wrote back in 2011. “But rather than being comfortably anesthetizedthe soldiers had to grit their teeth through the pain of having their limbs amputated” (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2021188/Civil-war-surgery-The-grisly-photos-wounded-soldiers-treated.html#ixzz3r6FcPVtF).

Medicine was still primitive during the Civil War (1861-1865), but in the 1840s and 1850s, American doctors were working hard to develop anesthesia.

First Surgical Procedure Using Anesthesia

On October 16, 1846, Boston dentist William T.G. Morton used sulfuric ether to anesthetize a man who needed surgery to remove a vascular tumor from his neck, according to “The Painful Story Behind Modern Anesthesia” by Dr. Howard Markel on PBS.org (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/the-painful-story-behind-modern-anesthesia/)

Surgeon John Warren performed the procedure on patient Glenn Abbott.

William T.G. Morton called his creation Letheon, named after the Lethe River of Greek mythology, noted for its waters that helped erase “painful memories.”

Morton started buying ether from a local chemist and “began exposing himself and a menagerie of pets to ether fumes. Satisfied with its safety and reliability, he began using ether on his dental patients,” Dr. Howard Markel writes on PBS.org. “Soon, mobs of tooth-aching, dollar-waving Bostonians made their way to his office. Morton relished his financial success but quickly perceived that Letheon was good for far more than pulling teeth.”

Historical accounts say Morton hoped to make a fortune off his “discovery,” but he ran into many snags before and afterward. Morton worked with another dentist, Horace Wells. In 1845, just one year before the first successful surgery with anesthesia, Morton and Wells had been experimenting with nitrous oxide (“laughing gas”). During one infamous demonstration at Harvard Medical School in 1845, the two dentists failed at deadening the pain of a subject having a tooth pulled, causing major humiliation for both men.

In 1844, Morton had been listening to lectures of Harvard chemistry professor Charles Jackson about how the organic solvent sulfuric ether “could render a person unconscious or even insensate,” as PBS.org explains.

Timeline for History of Anesthesia

Below are facts from the website for the Wood Library Museum of Anesthesia in Schaumburg, Illinois. Visit the Wood Library Museum of Anesthesia website (http://www.woodlibrarymuseum.org/history-of-anesthesia/) for more in-depth history. Please note this timeline only includes events after the first surgical procedure using anesthesia in 1846. Refer to the museum’s website for earlier developments in anesthesia going back to 4,000 BCE.