Lights Criteria Calculator
Calculate lights criteria using standard scientific formulas with worked examples
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About Lights Criteria Calculator
What Is the Light's Criteria Calculator?
When fluid accumulates in the pleural space surrounding the lungs, one of the first questions a clinician must answer is whether the effusion is a transudate or an exudate. This distinction drives the entire diagnostic workup and treatment plan. The Light's Criteria Calculator applies the widely accepted criteria published by Dr. Richard Light in 1972 to help you make that determination quickly and reliably. Simply enter the relevant lab values from the pleural fluid and serum, and the calculator tells you whether the effusion meets exudative criteria.
The Three Criteria That Define an Exudate
Light's Criteria classifies a pleural effusion as exudative if any one of the following three conditions is met. First, the ratio of pleural fluid protein to serum protein exceeds 0.5. Second, the ratio of pleural fluid LDH to serum LDH exceeds 0.6. Third, the pleural fluid LDH is greater than two-thirds of the upper limit of normal for serum LDH. If none of these criteria are met, the effusion is classified as transudative. Our Light's Criteria Calculator evaluates all three simultaneously and shows you exactly which criteria are positive.
Why the Transudate vs. Exudate Distinction Matters So Much
Transudative effusions are typically caused by systemic conditions like congestive heart failure, cirrhosis, or nephrotic syndrome where the underlying problem is fluid overload or decreased oncotic pressure. These effusions usually respond to treating the underlying condition and rarely require further pleural investigation. Exudative effusions, on the other hand, suggest a local process affecting the pleura itself, such as infection, malignancy, pulmonary embolism, or autoimmune inflammation. Identifying an exudate triggers additional testing including cytology, cultures, pH measurement, and possibly pleural biopsy. Getting this classification right at the start saves time and avoids unnecessary invasive procedures.
Sensitivity and Specificity of Light's Criteria
The Light's Criteria Calculator implements a rule that has been validated extensively over five decades. The criteria have a sensitivity of approximately 98 percent for identifying exudates, meaning they rarely miss a true exudate. However, the specificity is around 80 percent, which means some transudates, particularly in patients on diuretics, can be misclassified as exudates. This is a known limitation, and clinicians often apply adjunctive tests like the serum-to-pleural-fluid albumin gradient when the clinical picture does not match the Light's classification.
Step-by-Step: How to Use This Tool
Using our Light's Criteria Calculator is straightforward. You will need four laboratory values readily available from the thoracentesis results and concurrent serum labs. Enter the pleural fluid protein, serum protein, pleural fluid LDH, and serum LDH. You can also optionally enter the upper limit of normal for serum LDH at your institution, since reference ranges vary between laboratories. Once you hit calculate, the tool evaluates each criterion individually and provides an overall classification along with a clear explanation of the reasoning.
Common Clinical Scenarios
Consider a 68-year-old patient with bilateral pleural effusions and known heart failure. You perform a diagnostic thoracentesis and send the fluid for analysis. Plugging the results into the Light's Criteria Calculator shows all three criteria are negative, confirming a transudative effusion consistent with the heart failure diagnosis. Now consider a 55-year-old with a unilateral effusion, fever, and cough. The calculator shows two of three criteria positive, classifying the effusion as exudative and prompting you to send fluid for Gram stain, culture, and cytology to rule out empyema or malignancy.
A Trusted Bedside Reference
Whether you are a pulmonologist, an internist, a critical care fellow, or a medical student on your first clinical rotation, having the Light's Criteria Calculator bookmarked on your phone provides instant access to one of medicine's most frequently used diagnostic rules. It runs entirely in your browser, requires no login, and keeps all data on your device. Use it confidently at the bedside, in the reading room, or during case presentations.