etomidate
anaesthetic | etomidate |
As nouns the difference between anaesthetic and etomidate is that anaesthetic is a substance that causes reversible loss of sensation or loss of consciousness; used to perform surgery without pain while etomidate is (medicine) a short-acting intravenous anaesthetic, ethyl 3-[(1r)-1-phenylethyl]imidazole-4-carboxylate . As an adjective anaesthetic is of, relating to, or causing anaesthesia.
intravenous | etomidate |
In medicine|lang=en terms the difference between intravenous and etomidate is that intravenous is (medicine) a dose of medicine administered from a drip, down through a hollow needle inserted into a patient's vein while etomidate is (medicine) a short-acting intravenous anaesthetic, ethyl 3-[(1r)-1-phenylethyl]imidazole-4-carboxylate . As nouns the difference between intravenous and etomidate is that intravenous is (medicine) a dose of medicine administered from a drip, down through a hollow needle inserted into a patient's vein while etomidate is (medicine) a short-acting intravenous anaesthetic, ethyl 3-[(1r)-1-phenylethyl]imidazole-4-carboxylate . As an adjective intravenous is inside the veins.
|