Peter Schuller, MB

Michael Wang PhD interviews Peter Schuller, MB, MAA 10 Conference Helsinki, Finland 

 

 

 Schuller_2015_Response of bispectral index to neuromuscular block in awake volunteers

 Smith, S. M., H. O. Brown and et al. (1947). "The lack of cerebral effects of d-tubocurarine." Anesthesiology 8(1): 1-14.

 

 Part 1 of 3

 

 Peter_Schuller_transcript_Part 1

 

Michael Wang, PhD interviews Dr Peter Schuller, FANZCA, Consultant Anaesthetist Part 1 of 3    
     
  Mins Secs
MaW: What is adequate anesthesia? 0 28
MaW: use of neuromuscular blocking agents, nmbs, or muscle relaxants, MRs 1 44
Maw: is all types patient movement during surgery dangerous? 3 26
MaW: Would you talk to the patient if patient moved? 4 10

 

 

 

Part 2 of 3

 

 Peter Schuller transcript 2 of 3

 

Micahel Wang, PhD interviews Dr Peter Schuller, FANZCA, Consultant Anaesthetist, Part 2 of 3
     
  Mins Secs
PS: paralysis without pain is disturbing  0 0
PS: most anesthetists won't volunteer for this experiment 1 1
MaW: anesthetists reaction to MaW being paralyzed/awake 1 37
PS: How get ethics approval 2 14
MaW: Asks PS to describe his experience to be paralyzed and awake? 3 27
MaW describes his experience of being paralyzed and awake 5 5

 

 

 

Part 3 of 3

 

 Peter Schuller transcript 3 of 3

 

Micahel Wang, PhD interviews Dr Peter Schuller, FANZCA, Consultant Anaesthetist Part 3 of 3    
     
  Mins Secs
PS: volunteers require larger tidal volumes than normally given to patients to not feel dyspneic; 0 0
MaW & PS: issues related to volunteers feeling that they were not getting enough breadth; smith et al  1947; 2 1
Maw: Discusses his  presentation at MAA10 of a case of emergence paralysis in which the patient thought he was suffocating; 3 38
PS: suxamethonium recovery  4 11
MaW: patients have catastrophic misinterpretations of their awake and paralyzed experience; 6 41

 

 

 

 

 

 Peter Schuller 

 Peter Schuller, MB, Consultant Anesthetist 

Department of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care,
Cairns Hospital, PO Box 902, Cairns QLD 4870, Australia,
peterjschuller@gmail.com

 

Michael Wang

Michael Wang is Emeritus Professor of Clinical Psychology in the College of Medicine, Biological Science and Psychology, University of Leicester UK, and Honorary Consultant Clinical Psychologist in Anaesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Management at Leicester Royal Infirmary UK. He is a former Chair of the Division of Clinical Psychology of the British Psychological Society. He has worked as a clinical psychologist for more than 35 years, treating patients with PTSD, anxiety disorders, depression, obsessional compulsive disorder, and in particular, psychological problems arising from unplanned anaesthetic and surgical incidents.

 

Anthony Messina

Anthony Messina, MD, MSPH, MBA is a retired Adjunct Professor of Healthcare Management at the Jindal School of Management, University of Texas at Dallas and anesthesiologist.