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Apex Nursing

Guide — Critical Care

Neuro Assessment and Neuro Checks

A systematic approach to neurological assessment at the bedside — level of consciousness, pupil exam, motor and sensory testing, cranial nerve screening, documentation priorities, and how to recognize acute neurological deterioration.

12 min read · Critical Care

Educational use only. Neurological assessment findings must be interpreted within the full clinical context and communicated through appropriate escalation channels. This content is for learning purposes and does not substitute clinical judgment or institutional protocols. 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.

Why Neuro Checks Matter

Neurological deterioration can develop rapidly and often presents with subtle early warning signs. A systematic, repeatable neuro check allows nurses to detect changes early, establish baselines for comparison, and communicate findings clearly to the care team.

The most important principle is knowing the baseline so you can identify change. A GCS of 14 is meaningful only when you know the patient's prior score was 15. A pupil that was sluggish an hour ago and is now fixed is a critical trend — not just an isolated finding.

Components of a Neuro Check

ComponentWhat to AssessWhat to Document
Level of ConsciousnessResponse to voice, light touch, and painful stimuliAlert, lethargic, obtunded, stuporous, comatose; GCS score with subscores
OrientationPerson, place, time, situation (×4)Oriented ×1, ×2, ×3, ×4 — specify what is intact
PupilsSize (mm), equality, reactivity to light, shapePERRL; anisocoria; sluggish vs. brisk; fixed vs. reactive
Motor StrengthGrip strength, plantar flexion/dorsiflexion bilaterallyMRC 0–5 scale bilaterally; pronator drift; asymmetry
SensorySensation to light touch or noxious stimulus bilaterallyIntact/absent/diminished by region; symmetric vs. asymmetric
Speech/LanguageClarity, word-finding, comprehensionClear, dysarthric, expressive aphasia, receptive aphasia
Facial SymmetrySmile, nasolabial fold flattening, eyelid droopSymmetric vs. asymmetric; CN VII involvement

Level of Consciousness

Consciousness exists on a continuum. Precise, consistent language matters because vague terms like “less responsive” do not communicate the degree or nature of the change.

Alert: Fully awake, aware, responds appropriately to normal voice.
Lethargic: Drowsy but arousable with verbal stimulation; returns to sleep when left alone.
Obtunded: Requires repeated or vigorous verbal stimulation to arouse; slow, confused responses.
Stuporous: Arousable only with painful stimulation; limited or no purposeful response.
Comatose: Unarousable; no meaningful response to any stimulation; eyes remain closed.

The Glasgow Coma Scale provides a structured, reproducible score for level of consciousness. See the GCS Interpretation Chart for full scoring criteria and clinical meaning.

Pupil Assessment

Pupil assessment reflects brainstem integrity and can indicate rising intracranial pressure. Always assess in a dimly lit environment and compare to the prior documented findings.

FindingClinical Significance
PERRLNormal — pupils equal, round, reactive to light bilaterally.
Unilateral fixed and dilatedCN III compression — herniation syndrome until proven otherwise. Notify immediately.
Bilateral fixed and dilatedSevere brainstem dysfunction or cardiac arrest. Critical.
Pinpoint (miosis)Opioid effect, pontine lesion, or bilateral sympathetic disruption.
Anisocoria (unequal)Up to 1 mm physiologic in ~20% of population. New onset with neuro change = urgent.
Sluggish reactionLess brisk than baseline — can precede fixed dilation; trend closely.

Motor Assessment

Motor strength is graded using the Medical Research Council (MRC) 0–5 scale. Assess and compare all four extremities for asymmetry.

GradeFinding
5/5Full strength against resistance — normal.
4/5Moves against some resistance but weaker than expected.
3/5Moves against gravity but not against resistance.
2/5Moves with gravity eliminated (horizontal plane only).
1/5Trace contraction, no movement.
0/5No contraction whatsoever (plegia).

Pronator drift test: Have the patient hold both arms extended with palms up and eyes closed for 10 seconds. Downward drift or pronation of one arm indicates subtle upper motor neuron weakness — useful when gross strength appears intact.

Cranial Nerve Bedside Screening

A targeted screening covers the most clinically urgent cranial nerve findings:

CN II (Optic): Visual acuity, visual field testing by confrontation — field cuts suggest cortical or optic tract lesions.
CN III, IV, VI: Extraocular movements (H-pattern), pupil light reflex — abnormalities suggest brainstem or herniation.
CN V (Trigeminal): Facial sensation to light touch in three distributions (V1/V2/V3).
CN VII (Facial): Forehead wrinkling, smile, eye closure — UMN lesions spare the forehead; LMN lesions involve the full face.
CN IX, X: Gag reflex, swallowing, voice quality — hoarse or nasal voice suggests vagal involvement.
CN XII (Hypoglossal): Tongue protrusion — deviates toward the side of the lesion.

Neuro Check Frequency

Setting / ConditionTypical FrequencyRationale
Acute stroke (first 24 hours)Every 1–2 hoursRapid neurological change possible; early deterioration is actionable.
Post-op craniotomy / TBIEvery 1 hour (acute phase)Bleeding, edema, and herniation risk highest early postoperatively.
Neuro ICU (stable)Every 2 hoursClose monitoring without over-disturbing critically ill patients.
Step-down unitEvery 4 hoursStable but warrants ongoing neurological surveillance.
Medical-surgical floorEvery 8 hours or per orderRoutine monitoring for lower-acuity neurological diagnoses.
Any acute change detectedContinuous / immediatelyWhenever a change is detected, increase frequency and notify provider.

Recognizing Acute Neurological Deterioration

Any of the following changes from the patient's prior baseline warrants immediate provider notification:

Decrease in GCS of 2 or more points from baseline
New or worsening pupil asymmetry, sluggishness, or dilation
New focal deficit: unilateral weakness, facial droop, or aphasia
Loss of previously intact orientation
Sudden severe headache ('worst headache of life')
Onset of seizure activity
Cushing's triad: hypertension + bradycardia + irregular respirations
Change in respiratory pattern: Cheyne-Stokes, apneustic, or ataxic breathing

Cushing's triad is a late sign of herniation — do not wait for all three components before escalating.

Documentation Priorities

GCS score with all three subscores (E/V/M) — not just the total
Orientation status with specifics (×1 person only, ×2 person + place, etc.)
Pupil size in millimeters, equality, and reactivity bilaterally
Motor strength by limb with documentation of any asymmetry
Exact time of assessment and any interval change from prior
Interventions performed in response to any change
Provider notification time and response when acute findings are present

NCLEX Pearls

A unilateral fixed and dilated pupil indicates CN III compression from uncal herniation — this is an emergency.

Upper motor neuron (UMN) lesions spare the forehead on the affected side; lower motor neuron (LMN) lesions affect the entire face including the forehead.

Pronator drift reveals subtle ipsilateral upper extremity weakness that gross strength testing may miss.

Cushing's triad (hypertension + bradycardia + irregular respirations) = herniation until proven otherwise. Notify immediately — do not wait for all three components.

Document the trend, not just the value. 'GCS 14 × 2 hours, now 12' communicates more than a single number.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) · Surviving Sepsis Campaign · American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN). 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 →