NIH Stroke Scale/Score (NIHSS)

Calculates the NIH Strike Scale for quantifying stroke severity

Audience: PRACTITIONER

Published by EVAL Foundation

Revision 2 · Published August 7, 2024

Summary

Usage

The NIH Stroke Scale/Score (NIHSS) was developed through research supported by the NIH National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) to help clinicians involved in the treatment of acute stroke judge the severity of a stroke. The NIH Stroke Scale is used by clinicians to measure neurological function and deficits by asking the person to answer questions and perform several physical and mental tests. A person's level of alertness, ability to communicate, and perform simple movements can be scored from the checklist of questions and tasks in the NIHSS tool. 

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Summary

The NIH Stroke Scale/Score (NIHSS) comprises 15 questions covering the following 11 domains:

 

  1. Level of consciousness
  2. Best gaze
  3. Visual  
  4. Facial palsy
  5. Motor arm
  6. Motor leg
  7. Limb ataxia
  8. Sensory
  9. Best language*
  10. Dysarthria*
  11. Extinction and Inattention

 

*Language (aphasia) and dysarthria testing media is embedded in the question.

 

Each answer is given a point value. The score is the sum of all points.

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Instructions

 

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Literature

Contributors

Revisions

Current: Revision 2

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