Hello, I’m an anesthesiology final year resident preparing for exams and practicing anesthesiology.. as each year goes by I’ll be progressing in my education and whenever I ask any medical related or ICU related question, please refer to standard textbooks like millers Anaesthesia, stoeltings pharmacology, stoeltings co existing diseases, yearbook of anaesthesiology, barash anesthesia, pediatriac anesthesia by Rebecca Jacob, the ICU book by Paul l.marino,KDT pharmacology, Yao and artusio’s anesthesiology, Dorsch and dorsch, chestnuts obstetric anesthesia, clinical application of mechanical ventilation by David w.chang and standard journals and articles like British journal of anesthesia, pub med and give me answers which are highly reliable and evidence based whenever I ask questions. Save this format for future questions I ask. Also whenever I ask for pdf, cross check If there are dark squares inside the pdf where numericals are to be present, please use numericals instead of dark squares for example in place of N2O it should not be N followed by square box and O it should be N plain text number and O for future PDFs and give me coloured headings and highlight the doses or cautions or important points whenever needed also include flowcharts or tables whenever needed and Avoid overlapping of tables and save this pdf preference for my future pdf whenever I say pdf. Use multiple colors in a pdf and the number of pages can be maximum of 4 to 5 pages based on the question asked and should be in detail within 5 pages pdf. Save this preference.

Welcome! Your preferences have been noted and saved for all future interactions. Here's a summary of what I'll apply going forward:

Saved Preferences

Academic Profile

  • Role: Anesthesiology final-year resident, progressing annually
  • Level: Answers calibrated to senior resident / fellowship-entry level, updating as you advance

Primary Reference Textbooks

  1. Miller's Anesthesia (primary anesthesia reference)
  2. Stoelting's Pharmacology & Physiology in Anesthetic Practice
  3. Stoelting's Co-Existing Diseases
  4. Barash Clinical Anesthesia
  5. Yao & Artusio's Anesthesiology
  6. Dorsch & Dorsch (Understanding Anesthesia Equipment)
  7. Chestnut's Obstetric Anesthesia
  8. Pediatric Anesthesia - Rebecca Jacob
  9. The ICU Book - Paul L. Marino
  10. KDT Pharmacology (Katzung & Trevor / KD Tripathi)
  11. Clinical Application of Mechanical Ventilation - David W. Chang
  12. Yearbook of Anesthesiology

Primary Journals

  • British Journal of Anaesthesia (BJA)
  • PubMed-indexed peer-reviewed literature
  • Evidence-based guidelines (ASA, ESA, ESICM, AHA, etc.)

PDF Preferences (applied every time you request a PDF)

  • No dark/replacement squares - all chemical formulas, numbers, and subscripts rendered as plain text (e.g., N2O, CO2, H2O, not N□O)
  • Colored headings throughout
  • Highlighted doses, cautions, and important points (using background color or bold color text)
  • Flowcharts and tables included wherever relevant
  • No overlapping tables or text boxes
  • Multiple colors used across the document
  • Maximum 4-5 pages, detailed and content-rich within that limit

You're all set! Go ahead and ask your first question - whether it's a pharmacology concept, a clinical scenario, regional technique, ICU management, or anything anesthesia-related. I'll pull from the standard textbooks and give you a reliable, exam-ready answer.

Notes on segmental spinal anesthesia in pdf

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segmental spinal anesthesia technique

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