In a complicated and specialized population, such as patients undergoing cardiac and major vascular procedures, patients, clinicians, and hospitals may be best served and resources conserved with a specialized preanesthesia clinic. A specialized preanesthesia clinic for cardiac and major vascular procedures has a focused staff usually consisting of practitioners with cardiac and major vascular surgical care experience designed to address the patient evaluation, the information gathering, the necessary consultations, the required testing, and specific needs for the day of cardiac and major vascular surgery. Specialized preanesthesia clinics increase patient satisfaction and may also provide cost containment by decreasing the amount of indiscriminate ordering of expensive preoperative tests and potentially may decrease patient litigation. Resident trainee education can also be enhanced by a specialized preanesthesia clinic for cardiac and major vascular rotations. The ultimate goal of a specialized preanesthesia clinic is to ensure a safe and efficient perioperative cardiac and major vascular surgical experience in complicated patients undergoing complex proce- Day-admission surgery (DAS) is common in today's medical practice. The majority of patients receiving noncardiac surgery in the United States are admitted on the morning of the procedure. Although this practice was not common until the late 1980s, it has since proven beneficial to patients, physicians, and hospitals.There are several benefits of DAS. First, patients prefer morning admission because they are able to spend the presurgical night in the comfort of their home environment instead of in a hospital bed with numerous disruptions through the night. Second, DAS may also be beneficial in decreasing healthcare-system-acquired infections and delirium rates because hospitalization is a risk factor for both of these adverse outcomes. Third, DAS decreases the costs associated with hospital admission, including staffing costs, medication costs, and laboratory and radiology expenditures associated with hospitalization. Finally, DAS allows for more efficient utilization of hospital beds, and enables a net increase in the number of patients the hospital is able to treat at any given time.Although DAS is standard in noncardiac surgery and has proven to be safe and cost-effective for some vascular surgeries, including carotid endarterectomy 1 and aortoiliac 2 surgeries, less is known concerning the impact of DAS on patients undergoing cardiac and major vascular (CMV) procedures. Patients undergoing CMV procedures inherently present with increased surgical risk. Typically, the medical history of these patients is complicated and may include previous procedures, which may alter the current operation. Hence, the patient's complete medical history is of paramount importance before CMV surgery. Additionally, a complete picture of the CMV patient's current health status is critical, and this can often only be properly ascertained by invasive medical testing; ho...