Many Roma-area patients receive anesthesia at one facility and continue treatment with clinicians elsewhere—especially when follow-up happens through primary care, specialty visits, therapy, or emergency care. When records are fragmented, even small gaps can become major disputes.
That’s why your case usually needs more than “we think something went wrong.” It needs a documented timeline that connects:
- the anesthesia plan and medications used
- monitoring events and responses during and right after the procedure
- what symptoms appeared afterward (and when)
- how quickly follow-up care was provided
When that chain is unclear, defense teams may argue the injury wasn’t caused by the anesthesia care. Your lawyer’s job is to show how the medical record supports causation—not just suspicion.


