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AS1.1-4 | Anaesthesiology as a Specialty — Practice Quiz
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A medical student is reading about the history of anaesthesia and comes across the date 16 October 1846. This date is significant because it marks the first public demonstration of which agent for surgical anaesthesia at Massachusetts General Hospital?
Correct. 16 October 1846 — 'Ether Day' — was when William Morton publicly demonstrated diethyl ether anaesthesia at the Massachusetts General Hospital Ether Dome. This is considered the founding event of modern anaesthesiology.
16 October 1846: first successful public demonstration of ether anaesthesia by William Morton. Chloroform followed in 1847 (Simpson). This date is the historical anchor of anaesthesiology as a specialty.
Incorrect. Chloroform was introduced later by James Young Simpson (1847). Nitrous oxide had been demonstrated by Horace Wells in 1844 but the demonstration failed publicly. The landmark 1846 event was Morton's ether demonstration — often called 'Ether Day.'
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Which of the following anaesthetic agents, introduced in the 1950s–1960s, represented a major advance because it provided non-flammable halogenated inhalation anaesthesia and replaced the explosion-risk of ether?
Correct. Halothane (introduced 1956) was the first synthetic halogenated volatile agent. It was non-flammable, potent, and replaced ether in many settings, marking a key evolution from flammable to safer volatile anaesthetics.
Halothane (1956) was the pivotal non-flammable volatile agent. Subsequent generations (isoflurane, desflurane, sevoflurane) continued this halogenation principle with improved safety profiles.
Incorrect. Diethyl ether and cyclopropane are flammable. Chloroform is hepatotoxic and cardiotoxic and was phased out. The milestone non-flammable halogenated agent introduced in the 1950s was halothane.
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A 34-year-old woman in active labour requests pain relief. The anaesthesiologist places an epidural catheter and provides neuraxial analgesia. Which role of the anaesthesiologist does this BEST illustrate?
Correct. Labour analgesia (obstetric neuraxial pain management) is an explicitly listed role under AS1.2. The anaesthesiologist's scope extends well beyond the operating theatre to include labour wards.
The anaesthesiologist has at least five defined roles: peri-operative physician, intensivist, acute/chronic pain specialist, labour analgesist, and resuscitation physician. Labour analgesia is a standalone domain, not a subset of surgery.
Incorrect. While the anaesthesiologist does all of these, the scenario specifically describes the labour-analgesia role. AS1.2 lists this separately from peri-operative, ICU, and resuscitation roles — it is not a subset of peri-operative care.
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An anaesthesiologist in a tertiary hospital is asked to join the rapid-response team for a patient on the ward who has developed respiratory failure and altered consciousness. This activity BEST reflects which role?
Correct. Management of the acutely ill — including airway management, resuscitation, and stabilisation outside the operating theatre — is an explicitly listed anaesthesiologist role under AS1.2.
Anaesthesiologists are critical resources in ward-based emergencies and rapid-response teams because of their airway and haemodynamic management skills — this extends their role well beyond the operating theatre.
Incorrect. Peri-operative care is theatre-based. Chronic pain is an outpatient/long-term role. Labour analgesia is obstetric. Responding to acute deterioration on the ward falls under the 'resuscitation of the acutely ill' role.
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A 65-year-old patient with mild cognitive impairment is scheduled for elective inguinal hernia repair. His family asks the anaesthesiologist to 'keep him sedated so he does not panic.' The patient himself, when calmly spoken to, says he prefers to be awake with spinal anaesthesia. Which ethical principle is MOST directly upheld by following the patient's expressed preference?
Correct. Autonomy is the principle that a competent patient's informed decision about their own care must be respected, even if it conflicts with the family's wishes. If the patient has capacity, their choice governs.
In anaesthesia ethics, autonomy means respecting a capacitous patient's informed choice about their anaesthetic technique — the family's preference is secondary. Consent for anaesthesia is separate from surgical consent and must be sought directly from the patient.
Incorrect. Beneficence (doing good) and non-maleficence (avoiding harm) guide the anaesthesiologist's medical judgement, but they do not override a competent patient's explicit preference. The family's proxy request is relevant only if the patient lacks capacity. Respecting the patient's stated choice = autonomy.
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An anaesthesiologist discovers intraoperatively that the surgeon has made an error that caused inadvertent visceral injury. The surgeon asks the anaesthesiologist not to document the event. The anaesthesiologist's obligation under medical ethics is BEST described as:
Correct. Veracity (truthfulness) and accountability are pillars of medical ethics. The anaesthesiologist has an independent duty of documentation and cannot participate in concealment, regardless of collegial pressure.
Anaesthesiologists share independent accountability for intraoperative events. Concealing adverse events violates veracity and professional accountability — core principles under AS1.3 ethics.
Incorrect. Beneficence applies to the patient, not the surgeon. Delaying documentation or conditional reporting violates veracity. The anaesthesiologist's accountability is to the patient and the medical record — not to the operating surgeon's interests.
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A final-year MBBS student is counselled about postgraduate options. She is interested in Anaesthesiology. Which of the following CORRECTLY describes the career structure in India after completing MD/DA Anaesthesiology?
Correct. After MD/DA, anaesthesiologists can pursue fellowship/DM programmes in cardiac anaesthesia, neuroanaesthesia, paediatric anaesthesia, obstetric anaesthesia, pain medicine (chronic pain clinics), and critical care medicine — a wide subspecialty spectrum.
Anaesthesiology offers subspecialty depth (cardiac, neuro, paediatric, obstetric, pain, ICU), academic/teaching roles, and research opportunities — one of the most versatile careers in Indian postgraduate medicine (AS1.4).
Incorrect. Anaesthesiology has one of the broadest subspecialty spectrums in Indian medicine. Pain clinics are frequently run by anaesthesiologists, and academic and research pathways are fully available.
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The term 'anaesthesia' was coined to describe the state of insensibility induced by ether. Which 19th-century American physician is credited with proposing this term, derived from the Greek for 'without sensation'?
Correct. Oliver Wendell Holmes (physician and poet) coined the word 'anaesthesia' in a letter to William Morton in November 1846, deriving it from the Greek 'an-' (without) and 'aesthesia' (sensation).
Oliver Wendell Holmes coined 'anaesthesia' (1846). Crawford Long used ether first (1842) but Morton's 1846 public demonstration is the accepted founding event because it was published and widely disseminated.
Incorrect. Crawford Long used ether earlier (1842) but did not publish promptly. Joseph Lister pioneered antisepsis. John Snow was the first specialist anaesthetist in Britain. The coinage of the term 'anaesthesia' is attributed to Oliver Wendell Holmes.
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