ASA Physical Status Classification - Systemic Status Snapshot
- Purpose: Rapidly assesses patient's systemic health & physiological reserve pre-anesthesia.
- Origin: From American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) for standardized preoperative assessment.
- Nature: Subjective, qualitative grading of pre-existing comorbidities.
- Utility: Guides anesthetic strategy, resource use, & anticipates perioperative complications.
- Facilitates concise team communication on patient fitness.
⭐ ASA-PS classification is a subjective assessment of a patient's overall physical health, not a direct predictor of surgical risk.
ASA Physical Status Classification - Grading Patient Health
| ASA Class | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| ASA I | Normal healthy patient. | Healthy, non-smoking, minimal alcohol. |
| ASA II | Mild systemic disease; no functional limits. | Smoker, social alcohol, pregnancy, obesity (BMI 30-39.9), well-controlled DM/HTN, mild lung disease. |
| ASA III | Severe systemic disease; definite functional limits. | Poorly controlled DM/HTN, COPD, morbid obesity (BMI ≥ 40), active hepatitis, alcohol dependence, ESRD on dialysis, history (>3 months) MI/CVA/CAD/stents. |
| ASA IV | Severe systemic disease; constant life threat. | Recent (<3 months) MI/CVA/CAD/stents, ongoing cardiac ischemia, severe valve dysfunction, sepsis, DIC, ARDS, ESRD not on dialysis. |
| ASA V | Moribund; not expected to survive without surgery. | Ruptured aneurysm, massive trauma, intracranial bleed (mass effect), ischemic bowel with multi-organ failure. |
| ASA VI | Declared brain-dead; organ procurement. | Organ procurement surgery. |
| E | Emergency surgery modifier. | Added to ASA class (e.g., ASA IIE) when surgery is an emergency, delaying which would significantly increase risk. |
⭐ A patient with well-controlled diabetes or hypertension without systemic limitations is typically ASA II, but if there are functional limitations, they may be ASA III.
ASA Physical Status Classification - Urgency & Caveats
- 'E' Modifier: Denotes emergency surgery (e.g., ASA IIE).
- Added if delay significantly ↑ threat to life/limb.
- Important Considerations:
- Reflects physiological status, not overall surgical risk.
- Excludes surgical complexity, anaesthetist skill.
- Subjectivity possible in assignment.
- Age indirectly influences via comorbidities.
- Uncomplicated pregnancy: ASA II.
⭐ The 'E' designation (e.g., ASA IIIE) indicates an emergency surgery and generally implies a higher risk compared to the same ASA class undergoing elective surgery.
ASA Physical Status Classification - Risk Stratification Practice
- ASA I: Healthy patient.
- E.g., Elective hernia.
- ASA II: Mild systemic disease, no functional limits.
- E.g., Controlled DM/HTN, smoker.
- ASA III: Severe systemic disease with functional limits.
- E.g., Stable angina, old MI (>3 mo), poor DM control.
- ASA IV: Severe systemic disease, constant life threat.
- E.g., Recent MI (<3 mo), sepsis.
- ASA V: Moribund, needs surgery to survive.
- E.g., Ruptured AAA, massive trauma.
- ASA VI: Brain-dead, organ donor.
- Add ‘E’ for emergency (ASA IIE); ↑ risk.
⭐ While ASA-PS correlates with perioperative risk, it should be used alongside other risk assessment tools and clinical judgment, not in isolation.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- ASA I: Normal healthy patient; no organic, physiological, or psychiatric disturbance.
- ASA II: Mild systemic disease (e.g., controlled HTN, smoker) without substantive functional limitations.
- ASA III: Severe systemic disease (e.g., poorly controlled DM, stable angina) with definite functional limitations.
- ASA IV: Severe systemic disease that is a constant threat to life (e.g., recent MI, sepsis).
- ASA V: Moribund patient not expected to survive without the operation.
- ASA VI: Declared brain-dead patient; organs removed for donor purposes.
- Suffix "E" denotes Emergency surgery, modifying any ASA class (e.g., ASA IIE).
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