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The Collaborative International Dictionary
anesthetized

anaesthetized \anaesthetized\ adj. 1. rendered insensible by means of anesthesia. [Also spelled anesthetized.]

anesthetized

anesthetized \anesthetized\ adj. rendered insensible by anesthetizing. Same as anaesthetized. [Also spelled anaesthetized.]

Wiktionary
anesthetized
  1. Subject to anesthesia v

  2. (en-past of: anesthetize)

WordNet
anesthetized

adj. rendered insensible by means of anesthesia [syn: anesthetised, anaesthetized, anaesthetised]

Usage examples of "anesthetized".

Ballantine, thanks to the residents, got reasonable results, and his patients and their families worshipped him despite what went on when the patient was anesthetized.

The residents were standing around the anesthetized patient, their gloved hands resting within the sterile field.

It was, actually, rather pleasant in its way-the velocity anesthetized his sense of proportion and the balancing forces lulled his circulatory incapacity.

His pain and fear had been anesthetized, and he did not wish it back at any price.

The patient was already fully anesthetized and junior house staff were in the process of prepping the patient’s chest.

Ritual anesthetized, made the misery of her condition bearable, but it did not bring her closer to a resolution of her troubles.

He had only just anesthetized the cat, using chloroform that he concocted from common household cleaning fluids, had used strapping tape to secure its paws to the plastic tarp that would serve as an autopsy table, had taped its mouth shut to muffle its cries when it woke, and had laid out the set of surgical tools he had acquired from the medical-supply company that offered a discount to premed students at the university.

A hundred thousand persons lived under his eyes, waiting to be anesthetized and stacked like cordwood in the honeycomb passenger compartments that filled the Ship.

The patient was already fully anesthetized and junior house staff were in the process of prepping the patient's chest.

At the door of a ward I spoke to the attendant who indicated that a patient was about to be anesthetized, and Reinstrom and I entered the room.

Holmes, the attending physician of the woman whom we had seen anesthetized, missed his syringe and the bottle of scopolamine.

The wounded man had not been anesthetized and seemed feebly conscious of what was being done to save him.