Skip to content
Apex Nursing

Chart — Neurology

ICP Signs and Symptoms Chart

Intracranial pressure signs and symptoms — early through late findings with mechanism, nursing action, and urgency at a glance. Includes Cushing's triad and herniation warning signs.

Data Source: AANN Neuroscience Nursing Practice Guidelines / Brain Trauma Foundation Guidelines

Educational use only. 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.

Key principle: ICP signs progress in a predictable rostral-to-caudal pattern as pressure rises — early cortical signs progress to brainstem compression. Any sign that worsens or new sign appearing = escalate. Trending over time is more important than any single finding.

ICP Signs — Early to Late Progression

FindingPhaseMechanismNursing ActionUrgency
Progressive headacheEarlyMeningeal and vascular stretch from rising pressureAssess quality, location, onset, and severity; position HOB 30°; administer analgesics per order; notify provider if sudden severe onset or worsening trendroutine
Nausea and vomiting (often projectile)EarlyPressure on medullary vomiting center; vestibular irritationFall and aspiration precautions; NPO until evaluated; antiemetics per order; note relationship to position change or worsening headacheroutine
Blurred or double vision (diplopia)EarlyCN VI (abducens) stretch — longest intracranial nerve, most sensitive to ICP increaseDocument visual change; ophthalmology consultation; eye patch for diplopia; notify provider — early CN sign of elevated ICPmonitor
Subtle personality or behavior changeEarlyFrontal lobe compression by raised pressure; reduced frontal perfusionCompare to patient's baseline and family report; document specific behavioral change; notify provider; frequent cognitive reassessmentmonitor
Decreased level of consciousness (LOC)Early to ModerateImpaired cerebral perfusion; compression of reticular activating systemGCS every 1 hour; compare to baseline; notify provider for GCS decrease ≥2 points; implement ICP reduction measures (HOB 30°, neutral head, avoid Valsalva)monitor
Papilledema (optic disc swelling)ModerateICP transmitted through optic sheath to optic nerve head — indicates sustained elevated ICPFundoscopy finding — document and notify provider; confirms chronically or subacutely elevated ICPmonitor
Pupillary dilation — unilateralLate — Pre-herniationCN III compression by uncal herniation pressing on parasympathetics that constrict the pupilNOTIFY PROVIDER IMMEDIATELY — this is a neurological emergency. Initiate ICP reduction measures. Prepare for emergent intervention (mannitol, 3% NaCl, or surgical decompression).critical
Contralateral hemiplegia / posturing beginsLate — Herniation in progressCorticospinal tract compression by herniating tissueEMERGENT PROVIDER NOTIFICATION. Herniation is occurring. Hyperventilate if intubated (transient). Prepare for emergent CT and neurosurgical intervention.critical
Cushing's Triad: hypertension + bradycardia + irregular respirationsVery Late — Brainstem herniationBrainstem herniation triggers a vasomotor reflex attempting to maintain CPP — resulting in extreme hypertension; baroreceptors respond with reflex bradycardia; brainstem respiratory centers compressedCALL CODE / RRT IMMEDIATELY. This is a pre-terminal finding. Maximum escalation: emergent neurosurgical decompression is the only intervention with any chance of survival.code
Bilateral fixed and dilated pupilsVery Late — Imminent deathBilateral CN III compression from advanced herniation — both parasympathetic pathways destroyedCODE. If no advance directives to contrary, call code blue. This represents catastrophic brainstem injury — prognosis is extremely poor.code

Cushing's Triad — At a Glance

Brainstem herniation is occurring — call code immediately

↑ Blood Pressure

Widening pulse pressure — systolic rises dramatically

↓ Heart Rate

Reflex bradycardia — baroreceptor response to hypertension

Irregular Respirations

Cheyne-Stokes, ataxic, or apneustic breathing

Cushing's triad is a pre-terminal finding — NOT an early warning. Maximum escalation is the only response.

ICP Reduction — Nursing Interventions Summary

InterventionRationale
HOB 30°, neutral head/neck alignmentPromotes jugular venous drainage; avoid neck flexion or rotation
Avoid Valsalva (stool softeners, no coughing/straining)Valsalva → intrathoracic pressure → impairs cerebral venous return
Normocapnia (PaCO2 35–45 mmHg)CO2 controls cerebral blood vessel diameter — hypercapnia → vasodilation → ↑ICP
Normoxia (SpO2 ≥94%)Hypoxia → cerebral vasodilation → ↑ICP; avoid hyperoxia
Fever control (acetaminophen, cooling blanket)Fever ↑ cerebral metabolic demand → ↑CBF → ↑ICP
Osmotic therapy (mannitol, 3% NaCl per order)Creates osmotic gradient pulling water from brain tissue into blood
Pain and agitation managementPain/agitation cause ICP spikes; balance sedation with neurological monitoring
Minimize clustering of careRepeated stimulation (suctioning, repositioning, blood draws) causes cumulative ICP spikes

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with AANN Neuroscience Nursing Practice Guidelines / Brain Trauma Foundation 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 →