In San Carlos, many people travel from home to surgery centers and hospitals, then return to a routine of follow-up visits, work, and caregiving. That makes delayed symptoms especially difficult to connect to the earlier event.
Common “late” warning signs we see in case intake include:
- Recovery room reports that don’t match what the patient experienced at home
- Breathing or oxygenation concerns that worsened after discharge
- Memory gaps, anxiety spikes, sleep disruption, or concentration problems that become more noticeable over time
- Persistent pain, numbness, tingling, or weakness linked to positioning, airway management, or medication effects
A key point for San Carlos families: California claims often turn on timing—when the injury manifested, when complications were documented, and how clinicians linked (or failed to link) the harm to anesthesia and monitoring decisions.


