Anesthesia :
Barash 9th
Edition Elite Test
Bank and
Strategic
Compendium
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
This document is architected as a hierarchical learning system, progressing from foundational
scientific syntax to high-fidelity clinical simulations and complex grandmaster synthesis. Each
section is designed to build the cognitive resilience required for 2026/2027 top-tier anesthesia
practice, as defined by the UT Austin Dell Medical School "Leading EDGE" and "ACT"
(Advancing Care Transformation) curricula.
● PART I: THE PRIMER
○ The "Welcome to the Big Leagues" Hook: Transitioning from learner to practitioner.
○ The "Critical Action" Cheat Sheet: Non-negotiable formulas, laws, and 2026
standards.
● PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK (THE 88-POINT GAUNTLET)
○ Questions 1–28: Foundational Syntax & Application
■ Cognitive Focus: Basic Sciences (Genomics, Pharmacology, Physics, and
Core Physiology).
, ○ Questions 29–58: Professional Simulation
■ Cognitive Focus: Applied Clinical Management (Airway, Subspecialties, and
Monitoring).
○ Questions 59–88: Grandmaster Synthesis
■ Cognitive Focus: High-Stakes Crisis Management, Ethical Dilemmas, and
Multi-System Failure.
PART I: THE PRIMER
The "Welcome to the Big Leagues" Hook
The transition from a high-scoring academic student to an elite anesthesia practitioner at an
institution like UT Austin requires more than the recall of facts; it demands the synthesis of
physiological data into immediate, life-saving action. This test bank does not merely ask "what"
a drug is, but "why" its molecular structure dictates its failure in a specific clinical context. By
mastering these 88 scenarios, you are not preparing for an exam; you are preparing for the four
minutes of crisis that will define your career.
The "Critical Action" Cheat Sheet
Before entering the gauntlet, the following bedrock principles must be internalized as part of
your professional intuition:
Metric/Principle 2026/2027 Standard Clinical Application
MAP Target > 60 mmHg (Primary) Organ protection in noncardiac
surgery.
Alveolar Gas PAO_2 = [(P_{atm} - 47) FiO_2] Calculation of A-a gradient for
- (PaCO_2/0.8) hypoxemia.
SVR Formula [(MAP - CVP) / CO] \times 80 Differentiating shock states
(800–1200 normal).
2026 Pain Care Fascial Plane Blocks (Strong Opioid-sparing for open
Recommendation) abdominal/chest.
Airway Standard Max 3 + 1 intubation attempts Move to surgical airway
immediately upon failure.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Phase 1: Foundational Syntax & Application (Questions 1–28)
Q1: A practitioner is calculating the loading dose for a novel intravenous anesthetic in a patient
with a volume of distribution (V_d) of 250 liters. The target plasma concentration is 5 mg/L.
Which variable represents the MOST CRITICAL physical property affecting this V_d? A) Degree
of ionization at physiological pH. B) Rate of hepatic clearance via CYP3A4. C) The drug's
molecular weight below 500 Daltons. D) Protein binding to Alpha-1 Acid Glycoprotein.
● The Answer: A (Degree of ionization at physiological pH.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ B is incorrect: Clearance affects the maintenance dose and the drug’s half-life, but it
does not dictate the volume of distribution or the initial loading dose requirements.
, ○ C is incorrect: Molecular weight influences the rate of diffusion across membranes
but is secondary to lipid solubility and ionization in determining the total V_d.
○ D is incorrect: While protein binding affects the "free fraction" of the drug, it is the
non-ionized, lipid-soluble fraction that primarily determines tissue sequestering and
thus a large V_d.
The Mentor's Analysis: Mastery of pharmacology (Chapter 11) begins with V_d. If a drug is
highly non-ionized (determined by the relationship between its pKa and the tissue pH), it will
flood into the peripheral compartments, necessitating a massive loading dose to saturate the
"sink" before a therapeutic plasma level is reached. Professional Intuition: Always consider
the "sink" effect in the morbidly obese or the critically ill with altered pH states..
Q2: During a pre-anesthetic genomics screen (Chapter 6), a patient is identified as a "slow
acetylator." When administering medications that rely on the N-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2)
enzyme, the practitioner must be MOST concerned with which clinical outcome? A) Rapid
metabolism of succinylcholine leading to premature emergence. B) Increased risk of
drug-induced lupus from hydralazine or procainamide. C) Failure of codeine to provide
adequate analgesia. D) Resistance to the effects of non-depolarizing muscle relaxants.
● The Answer: B (Increased risk of drug-induced lupus from hydralazine or procainamide.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Succinylcholine is metabolized by pseudocholinesterase (BChE), an
entirely different enzyme system.
○ C is incorrect: Codeine conversion to morphine depends on the CYP2D6 enzyme,
which is subject to polymorphism (ultrarapid vs. poor metabolizers) but not
acetylation.
○ D is incorrect: Non-depolarizers are typically cleared via Hofmann elimination
(cisatracurium) or organ-based excretion, not N-acetylation.
The Mentor's Analysis: Precision medicine is the 2026 standard. Acetylation is a Phase II
metabolic reaction. Slow acetylators are essentially "over-dosed" by standard doses of
NAT2-dependent drugs because they cannot clear them, leading to accumulation and toxicities
like the lupus-like syndrome. Clinical Pearl: In a slow acetylator, "Standard Dosing" is "Toxic
Dosing.".
Q3: A patient is undergoing surgery at a high-altitude facility (5,000 meters). The practitioner is
using a variable-bypass isoflurane vaporizer. According to Dalton’s Law, which adjustment is
REQUIRED to maintain a constant partial pressure of anesthesia? A) Decrease the dialed
concentration because the lower atmospheric pressure increases potency. B) Increase the
dialed concentration because the number of anesthetic molecules per volume is decreased. C)
Maintain the same dialed concentration because the vaporizer naturally compensates for
pressure changes. D) Switch to a Tec 6 desflurane vaporizer, as desflurane is
pressure-independent.
● The Answer: B (Increase the dialed concentration because the number of anesthetic
molecules per volume is decreased.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Lower atmospheric pressure does not change the "potency" (MAC) of
the drug, which is based on partial pressure, but it does change how much is
delivered.
○ C is incorrect: Variable-bypass vaporizers deliver a constant volume percent, not a
constant partial pressure. At high altitude, 1% of a lower total pressure is a lower
partial pressure.
○ D is incorrect: The Tec 6 (desflurane) is actually more affected by altitude because it