In and around Murfreesboro, surgeries often involve patients traveling from home to local hospitals or ambulatory centers, then returning quickly to normal routines. That’s one reason anesthesia-related harm can feel confusing at first. Symptoms may appear during recovery, after discharge, or later during follow-up.
Common ways anesthesia injuries show up include:
- trouble breathing or unstable oxygen levels that weren’t addressed quickly enough
- prolonged nausea, confusion, or cognitive “fog” that affects daily life
- pain that seems out of proportion, or worsening pain after discharge
- nerve symptoms (tingling, weakness, numbness) that persist or worsen
- unexpected complications tied to medication dosing, monitoring, or airway management
Even when the care team responds urgently, outcomes can still be affected by earlier decisions and monitoring practices. The legal question is whether the care met the standard a reasonably careful anesthesia provider would use under similar circumstances.


