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ASA Physical Status Classification

For informational purposes only. This tool is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.

Detailed Guide Coming Soon

We're working on a comprehensive educational guide for the ASA Physical Status Classification. Check back soon for step-by-step explanations, formulas, real-world examples, and expert tips.

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Pro Tip

The key question for the II/III boundary is: 'Does this disease impose substantive functional limitation?' If a patient with COPD can walk up two flights of stairs without stopping, they may be ASA II. If they cannot walk across a room without breathlessness, they are ASA III. Functional exercise tolerance — rather than the diagnosis alone — is the most important discriminator between adjacent ASA classes.

Difficulty:Beginner

Did you know?

The ASA classification was originally introduced in 1941 by Meyer Saklad as a 5-class system for preoperative assessment. When it was first proposed, it was intended purely for statistical record-keeping, not for clinical risk communication. It became a clinical communication standard organically as anaesthesiologists found its simplicity invaluable. ASA VI (brain-dead organ donor) was not added until 1963. Today, despite its age and simplicity, no single replacement tool has achieved the same global adoption.

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