Friday, May 30, 2025

Central Nervous System (CNS) Examination

 Detailed and clinically oriented checklist of Central Nervous System (CNS) Examination, structured exactly as a doctor or medical student would perform and document it during bedside assessment.


🧠 Central Nervous System Examination


1. Higher Mental Functions (HMF)

Assessed when the patient is conscious and cooperative.

A. Consciousness & Orientation

  • Consciousness: Alert / Drowsy / Stuporous / Comatose
  • Orientation:
    • Time – Day/date/month/year
    • Place – Current location
    • Person – Own name, relatives

B. Memory

  • Immediate: Repeat 3 digits or words
  • Recent: Events from the same day (e.g., breakfast)
  • Remote: Historical/personal past events

C. Attention & Concentration

  • Serial 7s / Spelling ‘WORLD’ backward

D. Language and Speech

  • Spontaneous speech – fluent/non-fluent
  • Comprehension – follow commands
  • Naming – common objects
  • Repetition – phrases
  • Reading & Writing – comprehension & output

E. Intellect, Judgment & Abstract Thinking

  • Simple proverbs, similarities (e.g., apple vs orange)

F. Mood & Affect

  • Euthymic / Depressed / Elevated / Anxious
  • Appropriateness to context

2. Cranial Nerve Examination (CN I–XII)

CN I – Olfactory

  • Test each nostril separately with non-irritant smells (e.g., coffee)

CN II – Optic

  • Visual Acuity – Snellen’s chart
  • Visual Fields – Confrontation method
  • Color Vision – Ishihara plates
  • Fundus Examination – Papilledema, atrophy, hemorrhages
  • Pupillary Light Reflex (afferent limb)

CN III, IV, VI – Oculomotor, Trochlear, Abducens

  • Extraocular Movements – H test
  • Nystagmus – Direction, type
  • Ptosis – CN III lesion
  • Pupils – Size, shape, reactivity (direct/consensual), accommodation

CN V – Trigeminal

  • Sensory (V1, V2, V3): Light touch, pinprick, temperature
  • Motor: Clench jaw (masseter, temporalis)
  • Corneal Reflex: (afferent limb – V1)

CN VII – Facial

  • Motor: Raise eyebrows, close eyes tightly, smile, puff cheeks
  • Taste: Anterior 2/3 tongue (if needed)
  • Bell's phenomenon, asymmetry, flattening of nasolabial fold

CN VIII – Vestibulocochlear

  • Hearing: Whisper test / Rinne’s (AC>BC) / Weber’s (lateralization)
  • Balance: Romberg’s test, past-pointing, nystagmus (vestibular)

CN IX & X – Glossopharyngeal & Vagus

  • Uvula Movement: Say "ah" – deviation
  • Gag Reflex: Present/Absent
  • Voice: Hoarseness/nasal quality
  • Swallowing: Observe or ask

CN XI – Accessory

  • Trapezius: Shrug shoulders against resistance
  • SCM: Turn head against resistance

CN XII – Hypoglossal

  • Tongue: Protrusion (deviation, atrophy, fasciculations), side-to-side movement

3. Motor System Examination

A. Inspection

  • Muscle bulk: Wasting or hypertrophy
  • Fasciculations / Tremors
  • Posture and involuntary movements

B. Tone

  • Compare both sides: Upper & lower limbs
  • Spasticity: Velocity-dependent ↑ tone (UMN)
  • Rigidity: Uniform ↑ tone (Lead-pipe or Cogwheel – Extrapyramidal)
  • Hypotonia: LMN or cerebellar lesion

C. Power (MRC Grading 0–5)

Test against resistance in:

  • Upper limb: Shoulder abduction, elbow flexion/extension, wrist movements
  • Lower limb: Hip flexion/extension, knee movements, ankle dorsiflexion/plantarflexion

D. Involuntary Movements

  • Resting tremor, action tremor, chorea, athetosis, dystonia, myoclonus, tics

E. Coordination

  • Upper limbs: Finger-nose test, rapid alternating movements (RAM)
  • Lower limbs: Heel-shin test
  • Dysdiadochokinesia, intention tremor, past-pointing

4. Reflexes

A. Superficial Reflexes

  • Abdominal (T7–T12)
  • Cremasteric (L1–L2)
  • Plantar (L5–S1): Flexor (normal) / Extensor (Babinski – UMN lesion)

B. Deep Tendon Reflexes (DTRs)

  • Biceps (C5–C6)
  • Triceps (C7–C8)
  • Supinator (C5–C6)
  • Knee jerk (L3–L4)
  • Ankle jerk (S1–S2)
  • Grading: 0 (absent) to 4+ (clonus)

C. Pathological Reflexes

  • Babinski sign
  • Hoffman’s sign
  • Ankle clonus (sustained – UMN)

5. Sensory System Examination

A. Primary Sensations

  • Light Touch – Cotton
  • Pain – Pinprick
  • Temperature – Warm/cold test tubes
  • Position Sense (Proprioception) – Move finger/toe up/down with eyes closed
  • Vibration – 128 Hz tuning fork over bony prominences

B. Cortical Sensations

  • Stereognosis – Identify object in hand
  • Graphesthesia – Number traced on palm
  • Two-point discrimination
  • Tactile localization
  • Double simultaneous stimulation (Extinction)

6. Gait & Station

  • Normal Gait – Observe arm swing, step length, heel-toe pattern
  • Tandem Walking – Heel-to-toe in a straight line
  • Types of Abnormal Gait:
    • Spastic Hemiplegic – Swinging leg in semicircle
    • Parkinsonian – Short shuffling steps, stooped posture
    • Cerebellar Ataxia – Wide-based, unsteady
    • Sensory Ataxia – High-stepping, positive Romberg
    • Waddling (Myopathic)
    • Steppage Gait (Foot drop)

7. Cerebellar Signs

  • Ataxia – Gait & limb
  • Dysmetria
  • Dysdiadochokinesia
  • Intention tremor
  • Rebound phenomenon
  • Nystagmus
  • Hypotonia

8. Extrapyramidal Signs

  • Tremors – Resting (pill-rolling), postural, kinetic
  • Rigidity – Cogwheel or lead pipe
  • Bradykinesia
  • Mask-like facies, stooped posture
  • Postural instability

9. Meningeal Irritation Signs

  • Neck stiffness
  • Kernig’s Sign – Pain/resistance on knee extension with hip flexed
  • Brudzinski’s Sign – Involuntary hip/knee flexion on neck flexion
  • Photophobia

10. Signs of Raised Intracranial Pressure (ICP)

  • Headache, vomiting (projectile)
  • Papilledema (fundoscopy)
  • Altered consciousness
  • Cushing’s Triad: Hypertension, bradycardia, irregular respiration


Cardiovascular System Examination

I. Preparation & General Inspection 1. Wash hands → Maintain hygiene and infection control. 2. Introduce yourself and obtain consen...