Chart — Perioperative Nursing
Anesthesia Comparison
Side-by-side comparison of the six major anesthesia types: general, spinal, epidural, regional nerve block, local, and monitored anesthesia care (MAC). Each type differs in level of consciousness, mechanism, primary risks, and nursing priorities.
Educational use only. Anesthesia selection and administration are performed by anesthesiologists and CRNAs. Nursing responsibilities focus on preoperative preparation, monitoring, and postoperative complication recognition. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
| Type | Consciousness | Mechanism | Advantages | Key Risks | Nursing Priorities |
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| General | Unconscious | IV induction + inhaled agents + neuromuscular blockade. ET tube or LMA secures airway. |
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| Spinal | Awake (sedation optional) | Local anesthetic injected into subarachnoid space (intrathecal). Single shot — limited duration. Dense sensory and motor block below injection level. |
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| Epidural | Awake (sedation optional) | Catheter placed in epidural space — outside dura. Continuous or intermittent dosing possible. Slower onset and less dense block than spinal. |
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| Regional Nerve Block | Awake (sedation optional) | Local anesthetic injected near target nerve or plexus (ultrasound/nerve stimulator guided). Single shot or continuous catheter. |
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| Local | Fully awake | Local anesthetic injected directly into tissue at operative site by provider. Sodium channel blockade prevents depolarization. |
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| MAC / Conscious Sedation | Sedated but rousable | IV sedation titrated (propofol, midazolam, fentanyl, dexmedetomidine) to relaxed but responsive state. Airway reflexes preserved. Local supplement optional. |
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LAST — Local Anesthetic Systemic Toxicity (Any Anesthesia Type)
Symptom Progression
Emergency Management
- !STOP local anesthetic infusion immediately
- !Call code / anesthesia STAT
- !Lipid emulsion (Intralipid 20%) IV — antidote
- !Airway management: O2, bag-valve mask
- !Advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) if cardiac arrest
- !Do NOT use vasopressin or calcium channel blockers
NCLEX Quick Differentiator
Patient unconscious; ET tube placed; general anesthesia — PACU priority #1
Airway maintenance — lateral positioning until reflexes return
Post-spinal: BP drops to 85/55 after surgery — nursing action
IV fluid bolus; vasopressors per order; hypotension = most common spinal complication
Post-spinal: severe headache worse when upright, relieved when supine
Post-dural puncture headache (PDPH) — blood patch if persistent
Epidural: patient reports metallic taste and perioral tingling
Suspect LAST — STOP infusion, call anesthesia STAT, Intralipid ready
Regional nerve block to arm for shoulder surgery — priority nursing concern
Fall prevention and limb protection — patient cannot feel or move blocked arm
Provider orders local anesthetic ring block to finger; anesthetic contains epinephrine
Do NOT use epi in digit ring block — vasoconstriction → digital ischemia/necrosis
MAC patient: sedation score = barely rousable, RR = 7 — nursing action
Stimulate patient; withhold further opioids/sedation; consider naloxone; notify provider
Post-general anesthesia shivering in PACU — first action
Warming blankets; shivering increases O2 consumption and cardiac workload
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) Guidelines; ASPAN PACU Standards; AORN Perioperative Standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
