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Apex Nursing

Chart — Neurology

Glasgow Coma Scale Scoring Chart

The Glasgow Coma Scale is a standardized tool for assessing level of consciousness across three domains: Eye opening, Verbal response, and Motor response. It is used in trauma, stroke, post-op, and ICU settings to establish baseline neurological status and track changes over time.

Educational use only. GCS must be applied by a trained clinician in context. Factors such as intubation, sedation, pain, and language barriers can affect scores. Always document modifiers (e.g., “unable to assess verbal — intubated”). 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.

Eye Opening (E)

Max 4 points
ScoreResponseAssessment Cue
4SpontaneousEyes open without stimulation
3To sound / voiceEyes open in response to verbal command
2To pressure / painEyes open in response to sternal rub or nail-bed pressure
1No eye openingNo response to any stimulus
NTNot testableEyes swollen shut, orbital trauma

Verbal Response (V)

Max 5 points
ScoreResponseWhat It Looks Like
5OrientedCorrectly states name, place, date (person, place, time)
4ConfusedConverses but disoriented; incorrect information
3Words (inappropriate)Single words; no sustained sentences; may curse or shout
2Sounds (incomprehensible)Groaning, moaning — no recognizable words
1No verbal responseNo sound even with stimulation
NTNot testableIntubated — document as “V = 1T” or “V = NT”

Motor Response (M)

Max 6 points
ScoreResponseWhat It Looks Like
6Obeys commandsFollows two-step motor commands (e.g., “squeeze my hand”)
5Localizing painMoves hand toward stimulus to push it away (purposeful)
4Withdrawal from painPulls away from pain stimulus (non-purposeful)
3Abnormal flexion (Decorticate)Wrists flexed inward, arms to chest — cortical dysfunction
2Abnormal extension (Decerebrate)Arms and legs extended, wrists rotated outward — brainstem dysfunction
1No motor responseNo movement even with deep pain stimulus

The motor subscore is the most predictive of neurological outcome. Always assess the best response from any limb.

Total GCS Score Interpretation

Total ScoreSeverityClinical Significance
15NormalFully conscious and oriented
13 – 14Mild impairmentMay indicate mild TBI or early encephalopathy; monitor closely
9 – 12Moderate impairmentSignificant neurological dysfunction; high observation needed
3 – 8Severe impairment / ComaGCS ≤ 8 — airway protection likely compromised; consider intubation
3Minimum possibleDeep coma or death — no response in any domain

Report the score as a total AND by subscale (e.g., E3V4M5 = GCS 12). Changes of ≥ 2 points warrant immediate provider notification.

Nursing Considerations

  • Establish baseline early — document initial GCS on admission and after any change in status
  • Always report the best response per domain from any limb; do not average
  • GCS ≤ 8 — notify provider immediately; prepare for possible airway intervention
  • Trending — a declining score is more significant than a single low reading; report any drop of ≥ 2 points
  • Confounders — document sedation level, intubation, aphasia, and language barriers that affect scoring
  • Pupil assessment — always assess pupils alongside GCS (size, equality, reactivity); a fixed dilated pupil with declining GCS indicates herniation risk
  • Vital signs — Cushing's triad (hypertension + bradycardia + irregular respirations) indicates rising ICP

Documentation Rules

  • Always document individual components — “GCS 10: E3V3M4,” not just “GCS 10.”
  • Intubated patients — append “T” to the total and mark verbal as not testable: “GCS 8T: E2VTM6.”
  • Non-testable limb (fracture, cast) — document the reason: “M5 right (left NT — cast).”
  • Trend over time is more important than a single value — compare to baseline at every shift.
  • A GCS drop of ≥ 2 points is a significant change requiring immediate provider notification.
  • Use a central stimulus (sternal rub or supraorbital pressure) for unresponsive patients to assess eye and motor responses.

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Teasdale & Jennett / NICE Guidelines. 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 →