Duke Activity Status Index Functional Capacity Calculator

Calculate the Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) to estimate functional capacity in METs and VO2 peak. Assess perioperative cardiac risk for surgery.

About the Duke Activity Status Index Functional Capacity Calculator

The Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) Calculator is a validated 12-question self-reported questionnaire that estimates functional capacity in metabolic equivalents (METs) and peak oxygen consumption (VO₂ peak). Originally developed by Hlatky et al. in 1989, the DASI is widely used in perioperative risk assessment, cardiac rehabilitation, and heart failure management.

The ACC/AHA Perioperative Guidelines use functional capacity as a central determinant of cardiac risk before non-cardiac surgery. Patients who can achieve ≥4 METs (equivalent to climbing a flight of stairs or doing moderate housework) generally have low perioperative cardiac risk and may not need further cardiac testing. Those below 4 METs face elevated risk and may require pharmacologic stress testing or echocardiography.

Each DASI question represents a common daily or recreational activity with a known MET equivalent. The total score (0–58.2) converts to estimated VO₂ peak using the formula VO₂ peak = 0.43 × DASI + 9.6, which correlates well with formal cardiopulmonary exercise testing. This calculator scores all 12 items, estimates VO₂ peak and METs, assesses surgical risk, and provides reference tables for activity MET equivalents.

Why Use This Duke Activity Status Index Functional Capacity Calculator?

Formal exercise stress testing is expensive, time-consuming, and not always available. The DASI provides a quick, validated estimate of functional capacity that can be administered at the bedside, in the clinic, or even by phone. It helps clinicians determine whether further cardiac testing is needed before surgery and monitors functional status in heart failure patients over time.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Answer each of the 12 questions about your ability to perform specific activities.
  2. Select "Yes" if you can perform the activity without significant difficulty.
  3. Select "No" if you cannot perform the activity or would not attempt it due to health limitations.
  4. Review your DASI score, estimated VO₂ peak, METs, and functional capacity classification.
  5. Check the surgical risk assessment for perioperative guidance.
  6. Compare your results with the MET reference scale.

Formula

DASI Score = Sum of MET weights for "Yes" answers (max 58.2) VO₂ peak (mL/kg/min) = 0.43 × DASI + 9.6 METs = VO₂ peak / 3.5 Surgical Risk Threshold: ≥4 METs = low perioperative risk <4 METs = consider further cardiac testing

Example Calculation

Result: DASI Score: 16.25, VO₂ peak: 16.6 mL/kg/min, 4.7 METs — Good functional capacity

Walking indoors (1.75) + walking 1-2 blocks (2.75) + light housework (2.70) + moderate housework (3.50) + climbing stairs (5.50) = 16.25. VO₂ = 0.43 × 16.25 + 9.6 = 16.6 mL/kg/min = 4.7 METs. This exceeds the 4 MET threshold, indicating low perioperative cardiac risk.

Tips & Best Practices

The DASI Questionnaire in Clinical Practice

Developed at Duke University in 1989, the DASI was specifically designed to estimate functional capacity from self-reported activities. Unlike the New York Heart Association (NYHA) classification, which relies on subjective clinician assessment, the DASI provides a quantitative score derived from specific, reproducible questions about daily activities.

Perioperative Risk Assessment

The ACC/AHA Stepwise Approach to Perioperative Cardiac Assessment uses functional capacity as a pivotal decision node. Step 3 asks: Can the patient achieve ≥4 METs? If yes, proceed to surgery. If no or unknown, calculate the Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) and proceed accordingly. The DASI objectively answers this question without requiring a treadmill.

Beyond Surgery: Heart Failure and Rehabilitation

The DASI is increasingly used in heart failure clinics to monitor functional status, guide exercise prescriptions in cardiac rehabilitation, and assess candidacy for advanced therapies (LVAD, transplant). A DASI score consistently below 15 (approximately 2 METs) suggests severe functional limitation that warrants advanced heart failure consultation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Duke Activity Status Index?

The DASI is a 12-item self-reported questionnaire that asks about ability to perform specific physical activities. Each activity has a weighted MET value. The total score estimates functional capacity (VO₂ peak and METs) without requiring formal exercise testing. It was validated against maximal treadmill testing.

What does 4 METs mean?

One MET equals the resting metabolic rate (3.5 mL O₂/kg/min). Four METs represents 4 times resting energy expenditure, equivalent to climbing a flight of stairs, walking briskly, or doing moderate housework. This threshold is used in ACC/AHA guidelines to stratify perioperative cardiac risk.

How is DASI used in preoperative assessment?

The ACC/AHA Perioperative Guidelines recommend assessing functional capacity to determine if further cardiac testing is needed before non-cardiac surgery. Patients with ≥4 METs can generally proceed to surgery without additional testing. Those with <4 METs and elevated clinical risk may need pharmacologic stress testing.

Is DASI accurate compared to exercise testing?

DASI correlates moderately well with measured VO₂ peak (r = 0.58–0.81 across studies). It tends to overestimate functional capacity in sedentary patients and underestimate in active patients. For perioperative risk stratification, it performs comparably to clinical assessment but is not as precise as formal cardiopulmonary exercise testing.

Can DASI be used for heart failure monitoring?

Yes. Serial DASI scores track functional capacity changes over time in heart failure patients. A declining DASI score may indicate worsening heart failure or disease progression. It is simpler and less costly than repeat exercise testing for routine monitoring.

What if someone answers No due to non-cardiac reasons?

DASI does not distinguish between cardiac and non-cardiac functional limitations. A patient with severe arthritis might score low despite adequate cardiac function. In such cases, pharmacologic stress testing (dobutamine echo or nuclear perfusion) provides a better cardiac assessment.

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