Use The Following Criteria in Evaluating The Skill Performance
Use The Following Criteria in Evaluating The Skill Performance
COLLEGE OF NURSING
045 Admiral Village Talon III, Las Pinas City
NEUROLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
4 – Student was able to demonstrate the step correctly with rationale and without requiring guide questions
3 – Student was able to demonstrate the step correctly without requiring guide questions
2 – Student required guide questions to demonstrate the step correctly
1 – Student was not able to demonstrate the step correctly despite being given guide questions
PROCEDURE 4 3 2 1 REMARKS
1) Assemble equipment:
Sugar, salt, lemon juice, quinine flavours
Percussion hammer
Tongue depressors (one broken diagonally for testing pain
sensation)
Wisps of cotton, to assess light touch sensation
Test tubes of hot & cold water, for skin temperature
assessment (optional)
Pins or needles for tactile discrimination
2) Introduce yourself, & verify the client’s identity. Explain to the
client what you are going to do, why it is necessary, & how the
client can cooperate.
3) Perform hand hygiene & observe other appropriate infection control
procedures.
4) Provide for client’s privacy.
5) Inquire if the client has any history of the following:
Presence of pain in the head, back, or extremities, as well as
onset & aggravating & alleviating factors
Disorientation to time, place or person
Speech disorders
Any history of loss of consciousness, fainting, convulsions,
trauma, tingling or numbness, tremors or tics, limpoing,
paralysis, uncontrolled muscle movements, loss of memory, or
mood swings
Problems with smell, vision, taste, touch or hearing
Language
6) If the client displays difficulty speaking:
Point to common objects, & ask the client to name them
Ask the client to read some words & to match the printed &
written words with pictures.
Ask the client to respond to simple verbal & written commands
– e.g., “Point to your toes,” or “ Raise your left arm.”
Orientation
7) Determine the client’s orientation to time, place, & person by tactful
questioning.
Ask the client the city & state of residence, time of day, date,
day of the week, duration of illness, and names of family
members.
More direct questioning might be necessary for some people –
e.g.. “Where arre you now?”, “What day is today?”
Memory
8) Listen for lapses in memory. Ask the client about difficulty with
memory. If problems are apparent, three categories of memory are
tested: immediate recall, recent memory, & remote memory.
9) To assess immediate recall:
Ask the client to repeat a series of three digits—(e.g., 1-4-3)—
spoken slowly.
Gradually increase the number of digits (from 3 to 4 to 5 to 6
digits…) until the client fails to repeat the series correctly.
Start again with a series of three digits, but this time ask the
client to recite it backwards
The average person can repeat a series of 5-8 digits I
sequence, & 4-6 digits in reverse order.
10) To assess recent memory:
Ask the client to recall the recent events of the day.
Ask the client to recall information given early in the interview
Provide the client with three facts to recall (a color, an object,
an address), and ask the client to recall all three.
11) To assess remote memory: Ask the client to describe a previous
illness or surgery
Attention Span & Calculation
12) Test the ability to concentrate or attention span by asking the client
to recite the alphabet or to count backward from 100.
13) Test the ability to calculate by asking the client to subtract 7 or 3
progressively from 100 (e.g., 100, 93, 86, 79… or 100, 97, 94…)
Level of Consciousness
14) Apply the Glasgow Coma Scale. Assess for eye, verbal & motor
response
Cranial Nerves
15) Test the Cranial Nerves.
I. Cranial Nerve I – Olfactory
Ask client to close eyes and identify different mild aromas such as
coffee & vanilla
II. Cranial Nerve II – Optic
Ask the client to read Snellen’s chart; check visual fields of
confrontation & conduct an opthalmoscopic examination
III. Cranial Nerve III – Oculomotor
Assess the six oculomotor movements & pupil reaction
IV. Cranial Nerve IV - Trochlear
Assess six ocular movements
V. Cranial Nerve V – Trigeminal
While client looks upward, lightly touch the lateral sclera of the eye
to elicit the blink reflex. To test light sensation, have the client
close eyes, & wipe a wisp of cotton over client’s forehead
¶nasal sinuses. To test deep sensation, use alternating blunt &
sharp ends of a safety pin over the same area.
VI. Cranial Nerve VI – Abducens
Assess directions of gaze.
VII. Cranial Nerve VII – Facial
Ask the client to smile, raise the eyebrows, frown, puff out cheeks,
& close eyes tightly. Ask thre client to identify various tastes &
placed on the tip & sides of the tongue – sugar, salt - & to identify
areas of taste.
VIII. Cranial Nerve VIII – Auditory
Assess the client’s ability to hear the spoken word & the vibrations
of a tuning fork.
IX. Cranial Nerve IX – Glossopharyngeal
Apply tastes on the posterior tongue for identification. Ask the
client to move tongue from side to side and up & down.
X. Cranial Nerve X – Vagus
Assessed with CN IX; assess the client’s speech for hoarseness
XI. Cranial Nerve XI – Accessory
Ask the client to shrug shoulders against resistance from your
hands & to turn head to the side against resistance from your hand.
Repeat on the other side.
XII. Cranial Nerve XII – Hypoglossal
Ask the client to protrude tongue at midline, then move it side to
side.
Reflexes
16) Test reflexes using a percussion hammer, comparing one side of
the body with the other to evaluate the symmetry of response.
Biceps reflex – tests the spinal cord levels C-5 , C-6
- Partially flex the client’s arm at the elbow, & rest the forearm
over the thighs, placing the palm of the hand down
- Place the thumb of your nondominant hand horizontally over
the biceps tendon.
- Deliver a blow (slightly downward thrust) with the percussion
hammer to your thumb.
- Observe the normal slight flexion of the elbow, & feel the
biceps contraction through your thumb.
Triceps reflex – tests the spinal cord levels C-7, C-8
- Flex he client’s arm at the elbow & support it in the palm of
your nondominant hand.
- Palpate the triceps tendon about 2-5cm above the elbow.
Deliver a blow with the percussion hammer directly to the
tendon.
- Observe the normal slight extension of the elbow.
Patellar Reflex – tests the spinal cord levels L-2, L-3, L-4
- Ask the client to sit on the edge of the examining table so that
the legs hang freely. Locate the patellar tendon directly below
the patella.
- Deliver a blow with the percussion hammer directly to the
tendon. Observe the normal extension or kicking out of the leg
as the quadriceps muscles contract.
- If no response occurs, and you suspect the client is not
relaxed, ask the client to interlock fingers & pull.
Achilles Reflex – tests the spinal cord levels S-1, S-2
-
With the client in the same position as the patellar tendon
reflex test, slightly dorsiflex the client’s ankle by supporting
the foot lightly in your hand.
- Deliver a blow with the percussion hammer directly to the
Achilles tendon
- Observe & feel the normal plantar flexion (downward jerk) of
the foot.
Plantar (Babinski’s) Reflex – is superficial. It might be absent in
adults w/o pathology or overridden by voluntary control.
- Use a slightly sharp object such as the handle of the
percussion hammer, a key, or the dull end of a pin or
applicator stick.
- Stroke the lateral border of the sole of the client’s foot,
starting at the heel, continuing to the ball of the foot, & then
proceeding across the ball of the foot toward the big toe.
- Observe the response. Normally, all five toes bend downward;
this reaction is negative Babinski’s. In an abnormal Babinski’s
response, the toes spread outward & the big toe moves
upward.
Motor Function
Gross Motor & Balance Tests
- Walking Gait. Ask the client to walk across the room & back,
and assess the client’s gait.
- Romberg’s Test. Ask the client to stand with feet together
&arms resting at the sides, first with eyes open, then closed.
- Standing on One Foot with Eyes Closed. Ask the client to close
the eyes & stand on one foot, then the other.
- Heel-Toe Walking. Ask the client to walk a straight line, placing
the heel of one foot directly in front of the toes of the other
foot.
- Toe or Heel Walking. Ask the client to walk several steps on
the toes & then on the heels.
Comments:
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Clinical Instructor Student