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Chart — Neurology

Cranial Nerve Assessment Chart

All 12 cranial nerves at a glance — function, bedside assessment test, and clinically important abnormal findings for each cranial nerve.

Data Source: Clinical Neurology / Bates' Guide to Physical Examination

Educational use only. Cranial nerve findings must be interpreted in clinical context and escalated per institutional protocol. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Type key:S = Sensory, M = Motor, B = Both. Memory: “Some Say Marry Money But My Brother Says Big Brains Matter More” (CN I–XII).

Complete Assessment Chart

CNNameTypeFunctionBedside TestAbnormal Finding
IOlfactorySSmellIdentify common scent (coffee, vanilla) with one nostril occludedAnosmia — head trauma, olfactory groove tumor, COVID-19
IIOpticSVisionVisual acuity; visual fields to confrontation; pupillary afferent (RAPD)Vision loss, visual field cut, papilledema (elevated ICP)
IIIOculomotorMEye movement (up, down, medial), eyelid, pupil constrictionFollow finger in H-pattern; pupil reactivity; eyelid droop (ptosis)Fixed dilated pupil; ptosis; eye down-and-out — CN III palsy or UNCAL HERNIATION
IVTrochlearMSuperior oblique — eye rotates down and inwardLook down and inward; vertical diplopia when descending stairs?Vertical diplopia — most common after head trauma
VTrigeminalBFacial sensation (V1/V2/V3); jaw movement (mastication)Light touch + pinprick to all three facial divisions; corneal reflex; jaw clenchFacial numbness; absent corneal reflex; jaw deviation toward lesion
VIAbducensMLateral rectus — abducts eye outwardTrack finger to far lateral gaze; assess for inability to cross midline laterallyCannot abduct eye; diplopia on lateral gaze — EARLIEST CN sign of elevated ICP
VIIFacialBFacial expression; taste anterior 2/3 tongue; lacrimal/salivary glandsSmile; raise eyebrows; close eyes tight; puff cheeks; show teethBell palsy: entire face (incl. forehead). Stroke: lower face ONLY (forehead spared)
VIIIVestibulocochlearSHearing (cochlear); balance/spatial orientation (vestibular)Whisper test or finger rub; Weber + Rinne tuning fork tests; nystagmus assessmentSensorineural hearing loss; tinnitus; vertigo; nystagmus
IXGlossopharyngealBTaste posterior 1/3 tongue; pharyngeal sensation; gag reflex afferentGag reflex (afferent limb); taste posterior tongue; assess swallowingLoss of gag; dysphagia — always assess with CN X
XVagusBPharynx/larynx (motor); gag reflex efferent; parasympathetic to heart/lungs/GISay 'aah' — uvula midline rise; voice quality; gag (efferent); swallowingUvular deviation away from lesion; hoarseness; absent gag; dysphagia
XIAccessoryMSternocleidomastoid (neck rotation); trapezius (shoulder shrug)Shoulder shrug vs. resistance; head turn vs. resistance each directionShoulder drop; weak neck rotation — neck surgery, lymph dissection, cervical cord injury
XIIHypoglossalMTongue movementProtrude tongue and move side to side; assess for deviation, atrophy, fasciculationsTongue deviates TOWARD lesion (peripheral). In stroke: deviates toward WEAK limb side.

CN III and CN VI highlighted — most clinically critical for bedside neuro monitoring.

Type Summary

TypeCNsNotes
Sensory onlyI, II, VIIICarry afferent sensory signals to the brain only
Motor onlyIII, IV, VI, XI, XIICarry efferent motor signals to muscles only
Both (sensory + motor)V, VII, IX, XMixed nerves — carry signals in both directions

Critical Findings to Escalate Immediately

FindingLikely DiagnosisUrgency
New unilateral fixed and dilated pupilUncal herniation (CN III compression)CODE — call immediately
Unilateral lateral gaze palsy (cannot abduct eye)Elevated ICP (CN VI most sensitive) or brainstem lesionUrgent — notify now
New facial droop + arm weaknessStroke (CN VII + motor strip)CODE STROKE — activate immediately
Absent gag + uvular deviation + dysphagiaBrainstem stroke or GBS (CN IX/X)Urgent — airway at risk
Sudden onset of all bulbar symptoms (IX, X, XI, XII)GBS, brainstem stroke, ALS exacerbationUrgent — respiratory compromise likely
Sudden vision loss (CN II)Central retinal artery occlusion, stroke, amaurosis fugaxUrgent — possible TIA/stroke harbinger

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Clinical Neurology / Bates' Guide to Physical Examination. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →