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AS4.1-7 | General Anaesthesia — Assignment

CLINICAL SCENARIO

You will produce a comprehensive pre-operative anaesthetic assessment and plan for a standardised clinical vignette — a real clinical deliverable that junior anaesthetists produce before every general anaesthetic. This document integrates patient risk stratification (ASA grading), airway assessment (Mallampati + other predictors), choice and dosing of anaesthetic agents, intraoperative monitoring plan, vital-organ support strategy, and post-operative recovery pathway. The skill of translating a patient's history, examination, and investigations into a safe, evidence-based anaesthetic plan is the core clinical competency of the anaesthesiologist.

Instructions

  1. Read the patient vignette below carefully.

Vignette: Mr Ramesh, a 62-year-old male (weight 78 kg, height 168 cm, BMI 27.6), is listed for elective laparoscopic right hemicolectomy for a T2N0 carcinoma of the ascending colon under general anaesthesia. Past medical history: hypertension (well controlled on amlodipine 5 mg OD), type 2 diabetes (metformin 500 mg BD; HbA1c 7.2%), mild COPD (FEV1/FVC 0.68; on salbutamol PRN). No known drug allergies. Mouth opening 4 cm; neck extension full; thyromental distance 6.5 cm; on pharyngeal examination with mouth wide open and tongue protruded, soft palate, uvula, and fauces are visible but tonsillar pillars are partially obscured. He had a uneventful appendicectomy 20 years ago under general anaesthesia. He last ate a full meal 8 hours ago and drank clear fluids 3 hours ago.

  1. Assign an ASA physical status classification (I–VI) with justification.

3. Perform a structured airway assessment:
a. Assign the Mallampati class with justification (remember: Mallampati grades the oropharyngeal view, NOT systemic disease — do not confuse with ASA).
b. List three other bedside predictors of difficult intubation that should be assessed and their expected values in this patient.
c. Predict the likely Cormack-Lehane grade and explain your reasoning.

4. Design an anaesthetic plan covering:
a. Pre-medication and fasting confirmation (apply the 2-4-6-8 rule explicitly).
b. Induction: name the agent and dose in mg/kg (for Ramesh's weight), type of intubation, muscle relaxant and dose.
c. Maintenance: agent(s) and delivery method; monitoring (list minimum 5 monitors with their clinical purpose).
d. Vital organ support: circulatory, respiratory, temperature, and fluid management strategy.
e. Emergence and extubation criteria.

  1. Identify two potential intraoperative complications specific to laparoscopic abdominal surgery and describe how you would recognise and manage each.
  1. Outline the post-operative recovery plan including pain management strategy (multimodal, opioid-sparing where possible) and criteria for safe discharge from the recovery room.

Word guidance: 700–950 words (excluding tables/diagrams if used).

Length: 700-950 words

Grading Rubric — General Anaesthesia Assignment Rubric
Criterion Points Full-marks descriptor
ASA Classification and Airway Assessment: Correct ASA grade with justification; correct Mallampati class with description of pharyngeal findings; three valid bedside airway predictors identified; reasoning for C-L grade prediction is anatomically sound 20 pts ASA III correctly assigned with justification for all three comorbidities; Mallampati II correctly identified with accurate description of what is seen; three valid predictors (e.g., ULBT, thyromental distance, mouth opening) cited with expected values; C-L grade prediction logically derives from the airway assessment
Anaesthetic Plan — Agents and Doses: Induction agent named with correct mg/kg dose and actual dose for 78 kg; fasting confirmation applies 2-4-6-8 rule; muscle relaxant choice and dose correct; maintenance strategy appropriate for laparoscopic surgery 25 pts Propofol 1.5–2.5 mg/kg cited with actual dose range (117–195 mg) correctly calculated; 2-4-6-8 rule explicitly applied and patient confirmed to meet clear-fluid criterion (3 h) and solid-food criterion (8 h); non-depolarising NMBA at correct dose; maintenance with volatile or TIVA with rationale; all doses in mg/kg
Monitoring and Vital Organ Support: Minimum five monitors named with specific clinical purpose for each; organ-support strategy covers circulation, ventilation, temperature, and fluids; monitoring plan is appropriate for laparoscopic surgery 20 pts Five monitors named with a clinically meaningful purpose for each (e.g., capnography = confirms ETT position, detects CO₂ absorption from insufflation, estimates PaCO₂); circulatory support addresses PONV, laparoscopic haemodynamic shifts, Trendelenburg; temperature monitoring + active warming mentioned; fluid management includes goal-directed or maintenance strategy
Laparoscopic Complications and Recovery Plan: Two laparoscopic-specific complications correctly identified; recognition and management described accurately; recovery criteria and multimodal analgesia plan are clinically sound 20 pts Two valid laparoscopic complications described (e.g., CO₂ absorption → rising ETCO₂ + hypercapnia; gas embolism; surgical emphysema; haemodynamic shifts from Trendelenburg/pneumoperitoneum); recognition criteria specific; management steps correct; recovery criteria include standard parameters (consciousness, SpO₂, pain, PONV); analgesia is multimodal and opioid-sparing
Clinical Reasoning and Integration: The plan is coherent, internally consistent, and patient-specific (calculations use 78 kg); ASA and Mallampati are not confused; evidence-based reasoning is applied throughout; writing is concise and within word guidance 15 pts All calculations use patient weight; no conflation of ASA with Mallampati; plan is logically sequenced from pre-op through recovery; evidence-based reasoning cited for key choices; within 700–950 words

PEER REVIEW

Review your peer's anaesthetic plan using the following checklist:
1. ASA Grade: Is the grade correct and is the justification specific to the patient's three comorbidities? (ASA III for two controlled comorbidities + mild COPD)
2. Mallampati: Is it correctly assigned as Class II (soft palate, uvula, fauces visible; tonsillar pillars partially obscured)? Is it clearly distinguished from ASA?
3. Drug doses: Are all doses given in mg/kg? Has the author calculated the actual dose for a 78 kg patient? Flag any doses outside the safe range.
4. Fasting: Is the 2-4-6-8 rule explicitly applied? Has the author correctly confirmed the patient meets both criteria (clear fluids ≥2 h, last solid meal ≥6 h)?
5. Monitoring: Are at least five monitors listed with a meaningful clinical purpose for each?
6. Laparoscopic complications: Are both complications specific to laparoscopic surgery (not generic)? Is management evidence-based?
7. Highlight one strength and one area for improvement.