Post-Anesthetic Discharge Scoring System (PADSS)

The Post-Anesthetic Discharge Scoring System (PADSS) assesses day surgery discharge readiness across six domains: Vital Signs, Ambulation, Nausea/Vomiting, Pain, Surgical Bleeding, and Oral Intake/Voiding. Each scored 0-2, total ≥9 indicates safe discharge. Anaesthesia trainees use it alongside home environment and escort assessment to prevent premature discharge and complications after ambulatory surgery.

Continue reading

Aldrete Post-Anesthesia Recovery Score

The Modified Aldrete Score assesses PACU discharge readiness across five domains: Activity (0-2), Respiration (0-2), Circulation (0-2), Consciousness (0-2), and SpO₂ (0-2). Total score ranges 0-10; ≥9 indicates adequate recovery for discharge. Anaesthesia trainees use it alongside pain, PONV, and specific surgical assessments to ensure safe patient transition from the PACU.

Continue reading

Bromage Scale & Modified Bromage Scale

The Modified Bromage Scale grades motor block after neuraxial anaesthesia: Grade 0 (full straight leg raise, no block), Grade 1 (can flex knee, no SLR), Grade 2 (can move feet/toes only), Grade 3 (no foot/toe movement). It guides ambulation, monitors block regression, and detects complications. Anaesthesia trainees use it alongside sensory assessment for safe neuraxial management.

Continue reading

Train-of-Four (TOF) ratio

The Train-of-Four (TOF) ratio measures neuromuscular blockade using four supramaximal stimuli to the ulnar nerve; TOF ratio = T4/T1 × 100%. TOF ratio ≥ 0.9 indicates adequate recovery and safe extubation. Anaesthesia trainees use TOF to guide NMBA dosing, reversal (neostigmine or sugammadex), and prevent residual blockade, which is associated with significant pulmonary complications.

Continue reading

Bispectral Index (BIS)

The Bispectral Index (BIS) is a processed EEG parameter (0-100) measuring anaesthetic depth. Target for general anaesthesia is 40-60. It reduces awareness risk in high-risk patients, guides TIVA, and may aid recovery. BIS is affected by EMG, hypothermia, hypotension, and ketamine. It measures hypnosis, not analgesia. Anaesthesia trainees must interpret BIS alongside clinical signs.

Continue reading

KDIGO Stages for Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)

The KDIGO system stages acute kidney injury by serum creatinine and urine output: Stage 1 (≥26.5 µmol/L rise OR 1.5-1.9x baseline; urine <0.5 mL/kg/h for 6-12h), Stage 2 (2.0-2.9x baseline; <0.5 mL/kg/h for ≥12h), Stage 3 (≥3.0x baseline OR ≥353.6 µmol/L OR RRT; <0.3 mL/kg/h for ≥24h or anuria for ≥12h). Guides anaesthesia management.

Continue reading

West Haven Criteria (Hepatic Encephalopathy Grading)

The West Haven Criteria grade hepatic encephalopathy from Grade 0 (minimal/none) to Grade IV (coma). Grade I: mild confusion, sleepy; Grade II: lethargy, disorientation, asterixis; Grade III: somnolent, gross disorientation; Grade IV: unrousable coma. Anaesthesia trainees use this to guide airway management, drug selection, and postoperative ICU planning in patients with liver disease.

Continue reading

Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD)

The MELD Score predicts mortality in chronic liver disease using bilirubin, INR, and creatinine (MELD-Na adds sodium; MELD 3.0 adds albumin and sex adjustment). Scores range 6-40; higher scores indicate greater mortality risk. Anaesthesia trainees use it for perioperative risk stratification, drug dosing, monitoring intensity, and ICU planning in patients with cirrhosis.

Continue reading