1. Level of consciousness. 1a. Global.AlertDrowsy, not alert but awakens with minor stimuli, being able to obey and respondNot alert, requires repeated stimulation to maintain attention, or fully conscious and requires strong or painful stimulation to perform movements (non-stereotyped)It only responds with a reflex or totally indifferent, flaccid, areflexic motor or autonomic response. Coma. It should always be scored, even if there are obstacles to the examination such as endotracheal tube, language barriers or others. The score “3” is only considered if the patient does not make movements (other than reflex responses) in response to painful stimuli. 1b. Oral questions. Both answers are correct1 wrong answer2 wrong answers Children under 2 years old: a family member must be present 1st Question: how old are you? (correct if he indicates it verbally or with his fingers) 2nd Question: where is XX?, XX being the family member who accompanies him (correct if he says it, points at it with his hand, or looks at it). Intubated, etc. or severe dysarthria, score 1. If aphasic or stuporous (does not understand), score 2. 1c. Orders. Do both correctlyPerform one correctlyDoes not perform any correctly The child is asked to open and close his eyes and point to his nose. Substitute another order if you cannot use your hands for any reason. It is considered appropriate if the unequivocal intention to respond to the command is made even if it is not completed due to motor weakness. If the patient does not respond to the command, show him or her with mime what we ask him to do and write down the result. Only the initial response is considered. 2. Eye movement, conjugate gaze.NormalPartial gaze paresisTotal paresis or forced deviation of conjugated gaze Only assess horizontal gaze voluntarily or with oculocephalic reflexes. If the patient has averted gaze but this is corrected voluntarily, with eye contact or in a reflex manner, score 1. If he or she has peripheral paresis of an oculomotor nerve (III, IV or VI), score 1. 3. Visual field.No visual lossPartial Hemianopsia/QuadrantanopsiaComplete hemianospsiaBilateral hemianopsia (blindness, including cortical blindness) The visual fields (upper and lower quadrants) are explored by confrontation, using finger counting (children over 6 years) or threat reflex (children 4 months-6 years). The patient should be encouraged, but if he or she is observed looking at the place where the fingers are moving, this is scored as a normal response. If there is unilateral blindness or enucleation, the visual fields in the preserved eye are evaluated. Score “1” only if clear asymmetry, including quadrantanopsia. If the patient is blind for any reason, score “3”. Perform double simultaneous stimulation to detect possible visual extinction. If extinction is demonstrated, it is scored “1” and these results are also used in question 11. 4. Facial paralysisNormal symmetrical movementMild paralysis (effacement of the nasolabial fold, asymmetry in the smile, flabby upper lip)Partial paralysis (total or almost total paralysis of the muscles of the lower half of the face)Complete paralysis on one or both sides (absence of facial movements in the upper and lower half of the face) Ask (using mime if necessary) that the child show his teeth, raise his eyebrows, and close his eyes. Score the symmetry of the grimace in response to painful stimuli in patients who do not respond or do not understand the command. If facial trauma, bandages, orthotracheal tube or other physical barriers, try to remove them where possible to facilitate the evaluation of this section. 5. Motor function of the arms (Upper extremity paresis) The limb is placed in the appropriate position: extend the arms (palms down) 90 degrees (if sitting) or 45 degrees (if supine). Claudication is scored if the arm falls within 10 seconds. For children too immature to follow precise instructions or uncooperative for any reason, scoring is based on observation of spontaneous or elicited movement according to the same classification scheme, without regard to temporal criteria. In the aphasic patient, the response is encouraged by using urgency in the explorer's voice and pantomime, but not painful stimulation. Examine each arm separately, starting with the non-paretic arm. Only in the case of amputation or joint fusion or immobilization, a "9" can be scored and the examiner must clearly write the explanation to score as a "9". RIGHT SIDE. No fall, the arm remains elevated 90º (or 45º) for 10 secondsClaudication, the arm remains elevated at 90º (or 45º) but falls within 10 seconds, without falling completelyThe arm cannot be raised or maintained at 90º (or 45º), it falls to the bed, but some effort against gravity is observedNo effort against gravity, the arm falls completelyno movementAmputation, joint fusion LEFT SIDE. No fall, the arm remains elevated 90º (or 45º) for 10 secondsClaudication, the arm remains elevated at 90º (or 45º) but falls within 10 seconds, without falling completelyThe arm cannot be raised or maintained at 90º (or 45º), it falls to the bed, but some effort against gravity is observedNo effort against gravity, the arm falls completelyno movementAmputation, joint fusion 6. Motor function of the legs (Lower extremities paresis) The limb is placed in the appropriate position: extend the leg 30º in a supine position. Claudication is scored if the leg falls within 5 seconds. For children who are too immature to follow precise instructions or are uncooperative for any reason, scoring is based on observation of spontaneous or elicited movement according to the same classification scheme, without regard to temporal criteria. In the aphasic patient, the response is encouraged by using urgency in the explorer's voice and pantomime, but not painful stimulation. Examine each leg separately, starting with the non-paretic leg. Only in the case of amputation or joint fusion or immobilization, a "9" can be scored and the examiner must clearly write the explanation to score as a "9". RIGHT SIDE. No fall, the leg remains elevated 30º for 5 secondsClaudication, the leg remains elevated at 30º but falls within 5 seconds, without falling completelyThe leg cannot be raised or maintained at 30º, it falls to the bed, but some effort against gravity is observedNo effort against gravity, the leg falls completelyno movementAmputation, joint fusion LEFT SIDE. No fall, the leg remains elevated 30º for 5 secondsClaudication, the leg remains elevated at 30º but falls within 5 seconds, without falling completelyThe leg cannot be raised or maintained at 30º, it falls to the bed, but some effort against gravity is observedNo effort against gravity, the leg falls completelyno movementAmputation, joint fusion 7. Ataxia of the limbsNo ataxiaAtaxia in one limbAtaxia in both limbs This section explores the existence of a cerebellar lesion. It is evaluated with eyes open, using the “finger-nose-finger” and “heel-knee” maneuvers on both sides. Ataxia is scored only if it is present and disproportionate to the degree of paresis. In children under 5 years old, it can be replaced by the task of reaching for a toy for the upper limb and kicking a toy that the explorer is holding in his or her hand. Patients who do not understand or present paresis are scored “0”. 8. SensitivityNormal, no sensory lossWeak or moderate loss of sensitivity (the patient notices the contact but does not perceive if it is the tip or the flat side)Anesthesia. The patient is not aware of being touched on the face, arm and leg Sensation or grimace when pricked or withdrawal when faced with painful stimuli in patients with aphasia or stuporous patients. In children too young or uncooperative to grade loss of sensation, observe any response to the prick and score it according to the scoring scheme as a normal, diminished, or severely diminished response. Only loss of sensation attributable to the stroke is scored as abnormal and the evaluator must examine as many areas of the body (arms (not hands), legs, trunk and face) as necessary to adequately check for loss of sensation. A score of “2” is given only when severe or complete loss of sensation can be clearly demonstrated. Aphasic or stuporous patients score “1” or “0”. 9a. Language (over 2 years old).Normal, without aphasiaMild or moderate aphasia: the patient has difficulties speaking and/or understanding but what they say can be identifiedSevere aphasia: there is only minimal communication and it is very difficult to identify what the patient wants to sayGlobal aphasia, mutism: no possibility of speaking or understanding You will assess the understanding shown in all the previous tests. For children over 6 years old with normal prior language development; You are asked to describe what happens or the name of various objects shown, repeating words from a list. If vision loss interferes with testing, ask the patient to identify objects placed in the hand, repeat, and produce speech. Intubated patients are asked to write. The comatose patient (questions 1a = 3) arbitrarily scores “3” at this point. The examiner should choose a score in the patient with stupor or limited cooperation, but only score “3” if the patient is mute and does not obey simple commands. For children ages 2 to 6, scoring will be based on observations of speech and language comprehension during the screening. 9b. Language (for children from 4 months to two years)Alerts to sound and visually orients or exhibits behavior toward the location of the soundAlert to sound, but does not have spatial orienting behavior toward soundIs not alert to or oriented toward sound 10. DysarthriaNormalMild or moderate dysarthria. Babbles at least a few words and can be understood with some difficultySevere dysarthria: unintelligible in the absence of aphasia, or disproportionate to the degree of aphasia, or is mute or anarthricIntubated or other physical barrier Ask patients to read or repeat the words on the attached list. If the patient has severe aphasia, the clarity of spontaneous speech articulation can be evaluated. Only if the patient is intubated or has another type of physical barrier to speech production is it scored "9," and the examiner must clearly write an explanation. 11. Extinction (deletion, inattention) and negligenceNo alterationExtinction in the face of simultaneous bilateral stimulation or neglect in one of the sensory modalitiesSevere hemi-extinction or neglect of more than one stimulus. Does not recognize your hand or only attends to one side of the space It is assessed by the patient's reaction to a simultaneous and symmetrical bilateral painful stimulus (extinction), and by their reactions to visual, tactile, auditory, spatial or personal stimuli, in the previous tests (negligence). CalculateClean TotalTotal 314_07_EscalaPedNIHSS-1Download mmc1Download nih-stroke-scale_0Download