I really, really, pretty please, want your opinion on the whole ventilation thing.
Rolfe.
As ever, I am a sucker for those who turn their soulful big blue eyes in my direction and flutter their eyelashes....
Well I have now seen the tape.
I think there is little doubt the patient featured is the one recieving open heart surgery - no cut and paste clips of someone else as far as I could see. Everything looked consistent - drapes, eqpt, docs etc.
I cannot really comment on the requirement for intubation and ventilation for this type of procedure - presumably an atrial septal defect (described as a hole in the heart by the voice-over). I will have to ask some colleagues (I don't usually mix with surgeons or gas men).
However, what Asolepius says may be true, and it could be possible without intubation/ventilation (but you wouldn't catch me recomending this). ASD operations are not particularly complex, being one of the simplest procedures. It is quite possible the patient had a spinal.
The Mayo Clinic info on ASD is
here. They say even with GA, patients are in hospital no more than 4-5 days.
I don't think the patient had ketamine, unless very low dose to augment the sedation. Ketamine anaesthesia renders the patients immobile without impairing respiration/dropping BP - they are still essentially paralysed and could not talk/move their eyes as this woman tried to do.
BTW- I think Sykes was not sceptical/objective enough. She was rather contradictory, at times saying reasonable things like "acupuncture is certainly not the cure-all it is said to be" after looking at the published trials, but then appeared to go all starry-eyed at the "amazing" success of the MRI study. She seemed to accept some form of co-ownership of this trial, so no wonder she went all weak at the knees when discussing its results.
Like Asolepius, I would like to know more about the trial. Presumably this was a clinical trial which passed ethics approval. Who funded it? Why was someone with trial methodology expertise or a statistician not one of the "experts" involved in setting up the study? Why was it left to the acupuncturist to decide what the interventions should be (shallow vs deep needling) and decide where the needling should take place? Why were more controls not set up to look at other non-meridian sites and why were sham needles not also used (Sykes was gushing in her praise of these needles earlier on)?
What were the specific stated objectives of the trial and why was the investigation of needling at non-acupuncture meridian sites not one of its aims. Was this poo-pooed by the acupuncturist?
When do we get to see the trial published in a peer-reviewed journal? Will a journal be willing to publish a trial whose findings have already been placed into the public domain? etc etc......
Oh, and finally, are acupuncture needles
non-ferromagnetic? 
I think they are stainless steel. What might this mean when interpreting the "effect" of the needles in the tissues in a 3 tesla magnetic field?
Perhaps all we can conclude from the trial that needling triggers a neuronal response only if performed in a magnetic field strong enough to rip artificial heart valves out of your chest?