> children sometimes wake up from anesthesia with a set of side effects including lack of eye contact, inconsolability, unawareness of surroundings, restlessness, and non-purposeful movements
In general, a very simple mental model for general anesthesia is that it's an unnatural state for your body and your body will do its best to get rid of it, similar to say alcohol or drugs. This means systemic inflammation, stress on your cardiovascular system, liver and kidneys, brain, and so forth. Most all of these issues scale with how much anesthetic you receive, similar to a hangover being worse the more you drink.
In other words, general anesthesia is rough on you just like getting black out drunk is, it's just more controlled and we do our best to try and limit the downsides because it's invaluable for surgery where applicable.
> In other words, general anesthesia is rough on you
Can confirm having watched our kids recover from general anesthesia multiple times.
Full disclosure: have three kids, eldest child at lifetime total of 4x general anesthesia so far (1x for endoscopy, 3x for surgery), youngest child lifetime total of two (1x endoscopy, 1x dental work). Middle child seems to have escaped so far... he asked recently what it was like, siblings answered unanimously - "terrible".
Interesting. My adventurous child (soon 10) has been under thrice and generally remembers nothing unpleasant, despite it being a bit worrying for the parents. She has been a bit confused and weird upon waking up, but whatever they have given her to ease her transition into waking life appears to have made her forget it. She tends to remember talking to me (or watching Bluey) in the OR and then she is talking to some doctor in another room, wondering why they are not putting her to sleep. The experience has been quite smooth despite one of the times taking place in more of an emergency setting after an accident.
> children sometimes wake up from anesthesia with a set of side effects including lack of eye contact, inconsolability, unawareness of surroundings, restlessness, and non-purposeful movements
In general, a very simple mental model for general anesthesia is that it's an unnatural state for your body and your body will do its best to get rid of it, similar to say alcohol or drugs. This means systemic inflammation, stress on your cardiovascular system, liver and kidneys, brain, and so forth. Most all of these issues scale with how much anesthetic you receive, similar to a hangover being worse the more you drink.
In other words, general anesthesia is rough on you just like getting black out drunk is, it's just more controlled and we do our best to try and limit the downsides because it's invaluable for surgery where applicable.