NYHA Functional Classification Calculator

New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class for heart-failure symptom severity (I–IV).

For educational and clinical reference. Not a substitute for medical judgment. See the medical disclaimer.
NYHA Class
Interpretation

References

  1. The Criteria Committee of the New York Heart Association. Nomenclature and Criteria for Diagnosis of Diseases of the Heart and Great Vessels. 9th ed. Boston: Little, Brown & Co; 1994:253-256.

How to use

  1. Select the description that best matches the patient’s current symptomatic limitation.
  2. The NYHA functional class (I–IV) updates instantly.
  3. Reassess after treatment changes — NYHA class can improve or worsen over time.

Frequently asked questions

What is the NYHA classification?

The New York Heart Association functional classification grades heart-failure symptom severity from Class I (no limitation) to Class IV (symptoms at rest).

How does NYHA differ from ACC/AHA stages?

ACC/AHA stages (A–D) describe disease progression and are not reversible; NYHA class describes current functional status and can change with treatment.

Why does NYHA class matter?

It guides therapy intensity, eligibility for device/transplant referral, and is a strong predictor of mortality and hospitalization.

Is NYHA class subjective?

Yes — it relies on clinician assessment of reported symptoms, which contributes to inter-observer variability; objective measures (e.g., peak VO₂) can supplement it.

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