Anesthesia injuries often surface in ways that don’t feel “obvious” at first. In the Mesa area, people commonly learn later that they experienced complications such as:
- prolonged confusion or memory problems after surgery
- breathing problems or oxygen issues in recovery
- severe nausea/vomiting, aspiration concerns, or delayed recognition of instability
- nerve pain, weakness, or lingering pain that becomes the focus of follow-up care
Sometimes the first sign is a follow-up visit that doesn’t match what you remember happening in the operating room or recovery unit. Other times, the turning point is a later diagnosis after you’ve already been bounced between specialists, imaging centers, and outpatient therapy.
A lawyer can help connect the dots—between what the records show, what your body experienced, and what care should reasonably have looked like.


