Precision. Safety. Compassion.
Delivering exceptional perioperative care to every patient, every time.
Our department is a center of excellence, combining decades of expertise with the latest advances in anesthetic science to deliver unparalleled patient safety and comfort.
Complete loss of consciousness for major surgical procedures with full monitoring and life support integration.
Targeted nerve blocks and spinal/epidural techniques for precise pain control with minimal systemic effects.
Comprehensive acute and chronic pain management using multimodal approaches and interventional techniques.
ICU management, ventilator support, and hemodynamic optimization for critically ill surgical patients.
Specialized care for our youngest patients with age-appropriate techniques, dosing and monitoring protocols.
Expert anesthesia for labor and delivery including epidurals, spinals, and C-section management.
Essential laboratory values every anesthesiologist monitors before and during surgery.
Enter a lab value to see if it's within the safe pre-operative range.
Interactive clinical tools designed to support anesthesiologists in daily practice.
BMI is crucial for anesthesia planning — obesity affects drug dosing, airway management, and ventilation strategies.
The American Society of Anesthesiologists classification system for assessing peri-operative risk.
Normal healthy patient. No organic, physiological, or psychiatric disturbance.
Mild systemic disease. Well-controlled DM, hypertension, or mild asthma.
Severe systemic disease. Poorly controlled DM, COPD, morbid obesity (BMI ≥40), active hepatitis.
Severe systemic disease with constant threat to life. Recent MI, CVA, sepsis, ongoing cardiac ischemia.
Moribund patient not expected to survive without operation. Ruptured AAA, massive trauma.
Brain-dead patient for organ donation.
Predict the ease of endotracheal intubation by assessing the oropharyngeal view.
Full visibility of soft palate, uvula, fauces, and pillars
Easy IntubationSoft palate, uvula visible; pillars partially visible
ModerateOnly base of uvula and soft palate visible
DifficultHard palate only visible; intubation very difficult
Very DifficultAssess the health of a newborn at 1, 5, and 10 minutes after birth.
NPO (Nothing by Mouth) guidelines ensure patient safety and reduce aspiration risk during anesthesia.
Water, clear fruit juice without pulp, carbonated beverages, clear tea, black coffee
Breast milk only for infants and neonates undergoing elective procedures
Toast and clear liquids, infant formula, non-human milk
Fried or fatty foods, meat — full meal requires maximum fasting time
Calculate weight-based drug doses for common anesthetic agents.
Key pharmacological agents used in anesthesia practice.
Comprehensive evaluation including history, physical exam, laboratory workup, and risk stratification to plan the safest anesthetic approach.
Continuous multiparameter monitoring throughout the procedure to ensure patient safety and hemodynamic stability.
Expert management in the Post-Anesthesia Care Unit until the patient meets all discharge criteria.
Dedicated outpatient services for patients with chronic pain conditions, offering interventional and pharmacological management.