Mental Status Exam and Cranial Nerves
Mental Status Exam and Cranial Nerves
Mental Status Exam and Cranial Nerves
8. What you will document are the findings, and not conclusions! Avoid
using “normal” blatantly, rather describe objectively what you
observe from the patient;
8. “If one doesn’t write anything, one did not do anything” , a thorough
and detailed documentation of the neurological findings is better
than a lacking neurological evaluation.
The neurological history and the neurological exam findings
should closely be correlated in order for one to determine
the nature of the lesion, as follows:
1. Speech
Phonation
Articulation
Language Production
2. Level of consciousness
3. Attention and Orientation
4. Memory processing
Immediate recall
Recent Memory
Remote Memory
5. Calculation
6. Abstract thinking
7. Fund of information
Mental Status Examination
Speech
Phonation
- is the production of sounds as the air passes through the
vocal cords
Disorder: dysphonia
Articulation
- is the manipulation of sounds as it passes through the upper
airways by the palate, tongue, and the lips to produce phonemes
Disorder: dysarthria
Language production
- the organization of phonemes into words and sentences, and
is controlled by the speech centers in the dominant hemisphere
Disorder: dysphasia or aphasia
Phonation
Assessment:
- could have been observed during the history-taking
- if not, simply ask questions and get him to talk
- in dysphonia:
the speech volume is reduced
the voice sounds husky
Assessment:
- causes of dysarthria:
1. Cerebellar dysarthria - speech is slurred (“drunk”)
with scanning quality
Assessment:
Level of arousal:
Alert
Obtunded
Stupor
Coma
Attention:
Orientation:
Assessment:
• give simple addition and subtraction
• do – serial of sevens or threes ( subtracting sevens or
threes serially from 100)
Assessment:
Examine each nostril with the test agent, preferably with the examiner
closing each of the patient’s nostrils
Cranial Nerve I – Olfactory Nerve
Anosmia
congenital
nasal sinuses infections/tumors
head injury/cranial injury
frontal lobe tumors
subfrontal meningiomas
Olfactory hallucinations
temporal lobe epileptic seizures
Examine:
Ask the patient to cover one eye during the tests for each
eye
If the Snellen chart is not available, use the near chart. Hold the hand held chart 14
inches away, and do much the same procedure as using a Snellen chart
Cranial Nerve II – Optic Nerve
If the patient is unable to read the largest character, assess his ability to count
your fingers at 1 m (report as VA:CF)
If the patient cannot see your fingers, ask him to identify your moving hands (report
as VA:HM)
If the patient cannot see hand movements, flash light in front of his eyes (report as
VA:LP). If patient is unable to perceive light (VA:NLP), then the patient is
medically blind!
Cranial Nerve II – Optic Nerve
2. Ask the patient to look directly into your eyes and hold your hands halfway
between you and the patient
• Ask the patient to point at your moving finger/s for you to assess his visual
fields (Make sure that the examiner’s visual field is normal before the
procedure!)
4. The patient’s visual field will match the examiner’s if the head positions are
exactly halfway between the examiner and the patient (this is seldom the case)
If a visual defect is detected, test one eye at a time.
In a right temporal field defect, ask the patient to cover the left eye, and with the
right eye, to look into your eye directly opposite. Then slowly move a
wriggling / moving finger from the defective area toward the better vision,
noting where the patient first responds.
Ask the patient to fixate on a distant target and shine the light in each eye in turn
from the lateral side. Observe for the direct and consensual light reflexes
Accomodation Reflex
Accomodation Reflex
Cranial Nerve III, IV, VI – Oculomotor Nerve
Trochlear Nerve, Abducens Nerve
Steady the pt’s. head and to look in all directions as quickly as possible. Assess the
velocity and the accuracy of the movements
Describe this patient’s EOM paralysis. (The patient was instructed to
look downwards!)
Describe this patient’s EOM paralysis. (The patient was instructed to
look to the left!)
Describe this patient’s EOM paralysis. (The patient was instructed to
look to the right!)
Describe each of the images and discuss the EOM findings
Cranial Nerve V – Trigeminal Nerve
Motor functions of the CN V
Always:
Sensory testing for the taste (anterior 2/3 of the tongue has
less clinical benefit, thus, it is reserved for special cases
Motor functions of the CN VII
Test the pt’s. sensitivity by whispering numbers into his ears and
asking him to repeat it
Weber test
Check for lateralization of sounds conducted through the bones
Rinne test