Anesthesiology Examination _verified_ [2025]
You call for a blade. You attempt direct laryngoscopy. Grade III view.
But defenders—including the ABA itself—counter with a single word: . anesthesiology examination
The preparation is a form of controlled madness. Candidates form study groups that meet in hospital libraries at 6:00 AM. They buy the Faust manual, the M&M (Morgan & Mikhail) textbook, the TrueLearn question banks. They memorize the Miller’s Anesthesia chapters they swore they’d never touch again. They practice the “stem” questions until their voices go hoarse. You call for a blade
But residency is a safety net. An attending is always five seconds away. The boards have no net. They buy the Faust manual, the M&M (Morgan
You are given a scenario. It begins innocently: “A 32-year-old healthy female for knee arthroscopy.”
Then the examiner interrupts: “The patient has a history you missed. She forgot to mention she had gastric bypass three years ago. She now reports epigastric pain. What do you do?”