Many Fayetteville residents don’t realize a complication may be connected to anesthesia until days later—especially when follow-up happens with another provider or when symptoms evolve after discharge. Common patterns we see in cases involving anesthesia and sedation include:
- Delayed recognition of breathing or oxygen issues after sedation, especially when discharge instructions didn’t reflect the severity of the early recovery period.
- Medication dosing disputes (wrong dose, wrong timing, or inappropriate adjustments) that only become clear when anesthesia records are compared against monitor trends.
- Airway and recovery problems that appear minor at first but lead to prolonged treatment, therapy, or neurologic symptoms.
- Charting and handoff gaps between operating staff, anesthesia providers, and PACU/recovery teams.
Because care may involve more than one department—and sometimes more than one facility—your case often turns on whether the paper trail matches the physiologic story.


