Aldrete's scoring system
Template:Short description Template:Infobox diagnostic Aldrete's scoring system is a commonly used scale for determining when postsurgical patients can be safely discharged from the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU), generally to a second stage (phase II) recovery area, hospital ward, or home. It was devised in 1970[1] by Template:Ill, a Mexican anesthesiologist, while working at the Denver Veterans Affairs Hospital.
Scoring system
The original scoring system was developed before the invention of pulse oximetry and used the patient's colouration as a surrogate marker of their oxygenation status. A modified Aldrete scoring system was described in 1995[2] which replaces the assessment of skin colouration with the use of pulse oximetry to measure SpO2.
| Original 1970 version[1] | Modified by author in 1995[2] | Additional criteria by Marshall and Chung in 1999 for ambulatory surgery[3] | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Activity | Able to move 4 extremities voluntarily or on command (2 Points)
Able to move 2 extremities voluntarily or on command (1 Point) Unable to move extremities voluntarily or on command (0 Points) |
Steady gait without dizziness or meets pre-anaethetic level (2 Points)
Requires Assistance (1 Point) Unable to ambulate (0 Points) | |
| Respiration | Able to breathe deeply and cough freely (2 Points)
Dyspnoea or limited breathing (1 Point) Apnoeic (0 Points) |
Not included | |
| Circulation | BP 20% of pre-anaesthetic level (2 Points)
BP 20-49% of pre-anaesthetic level (1 Point) BP 50% of pre-anaesthetic level (0 Points) |
Sometimes heart rate is included (but was not in the author's second paper)
Heart rate 20bpm pre-anaethetic level (2 points) Heart rate 20-35bpm pre-anaesthetic level Heart rate 35-50bpm pre-anaesthetic level Patients 50bpm or >110bpm or with a change in ECG rhythm must be evaluated by an anaesthesiologist. These additional points change the overall target score. |
BP 20% of pre-anaesthetic level (2 Points)
BP 20-40% of pre-anaesthetic level (1 Point) BP 40% of pre-anaesthetic level (0 Points) |
| Consciousness | Fully awake (2 Points)
Arousable on calling (1 Point) Not responding (0 Points) |
Not included | |
| Colour or O2 Saturation | Normal (2 Points)
Pale, dusky, blotchy, jaundiced, or other (1 Point) Cyanotic (0 Points) |
Able to maintain SpO2 >92% on room Air (2 Points)
Needs supplementary O2 to maintain SpO2 >90% (1 Point) SpO2 <90% despite supplementary O2 (0 Points) |
Not Included |
| Pain | Minimal to no pain, controllable with oral analgesics (2 Points)
This target not met (1 Point) | ||
| Surgical Bleeding (as expected for procedure) | Minimal/Does not require dressing change (2 Points)
Moderate/Up to two dressing changes required (1 Point) Severe/More than three dressing changes required (0 Points) | ||
| Nausea and Vomiting | None to minimal (2 Points)
Moderate (1 Point) Severe (0 Points) | ||
| Interpretation of score | "Score of 9 or greater allows patient to leave Post Anaesthetic Care Unit" | "Patients who score 9 or greater and have an appropriate escort can go home." | |
Limitations
Alternatives
The following criteria also exist:[4]
- White in 1999 proposed "fast-track criteria" to determine if patients can be transferred straight from theatre to Phase II recovery. He proposes a minimum overall score of 12 with no score <1 in any category. He includes consciousness, activity, circulation, respiration, oxygen saturations, pain and emesis. This does not include bleeding or urine output.[5] This was used by Song et al. 2004.
- Post anaesthetic discharge scoring system (PADSS) used by Chung et al. 1995.
- Discharge criteria tool used by Brown et al. 2008.
- DASAIM discharge assessment tool used by Gartner et al. 2010.