Man, they used a mix that included ketamine for mine, and it was amazing.
Not necessarily the being high part, though that was nice.
It was the other effects. The visual and auditory hallucinations when coming out of anaesthesia were phenomenal. I was talking to angels and I don't even believe in such things (still don't, I know it was the drugs). It was some profound shit too, some deep insights into myself, and how I interact with the world.
Which may or may not have had any relation to the biggest benefit. My depression and anxiety, and even most of my PTSD symptoms went into remission for nearly six months. I still don't know if the nature of what was playing out nectar of the drugs did it, or if the drugs changed my brain chemistry temporarily, or some mix of those, but it was a huge thing.
While all of it came back, it wasn't as severe; and having had the experience of remission makes the bad days a little easier to get through. I guess that actually makes it a permanent/long term change, now that I'm thinking about it, just not a total change. That's been back to right after I got married, which was 12ish years ago.
Ngl though, the feeling of happiness during the time after I came out of it was pretty damn nice in its own way. I was in zero pain (chronic pain sufferer) for about an hour, and every step I took felt like walking on the moon. Just free and bouncy. I babbled non stop, with my mouth full of gauze, and was singing along to everything on the CD that was in the car.
That lasted until maybe a half hour after I got home, and then the nausea hit lol. Total buzz kill, that.
I hope, you got Paracetamol, or Ibuprofen instead of Aspirin, as the latter is an anticoagulant, which prevents the blood from thickening itself.
Other than that, that's exactly the same medication I got in Germany when my wisdom teeth were extracted:
Local anesthetics during the procedure, paracetamol for afterwards and a sick note for one day with the option to get it prolonged if necessary. Outside the US it's not as common to throw a ton of opioids at minor/medium pains. Which is why the US has an opioid crisis and we don't.
Motrin was the pill of choice when I was in the military. It was treated like a magic cure all for any ailment or injury, including dental work. No matter the issue, you got motrin.
WTF kind of drugs your dentist's give you? When I had my wisdom teeth removed I just got local anesthesia which made my mouth area numb and insensitive to pain for a few hours. I could literally drive home immediately after the procedure if I wanted to. Europe, for reference. Does this differ between the countries so much?
General anaesthetic is pretty normal for a wisdom teeth removal. It's potentially quite a big procedure, depending on how impacted the teeth are...and how many are impacted. @zach@lemmy.dbzer0.com's comment below gives good explanation.
I got mine removed in Vietnam and was put fully under.
They used to put you under and then give you a prescription for as many opiates as you could ever want here in Canada, but it was abused so now they just rip em out and send you away with instructions to take some ibuprofen.
Europe probably had the right idea, by the end of the second day I was only taking pain meds before sleep.