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Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust
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Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS

Dr Jonathan Birns

Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine

Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust

Page 2: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

0

20

40

60

80

100

Thrombolysis Control

Alive andindependent

Alive butdependent

Dead

Differences/1000: 141 extra alive and independent (P<0.01) 130 fewer dependent survivors (P<0.01)

To save 1 patient from disablement NNT is 7

Page 3: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

Outcome measures/Stroke scales

• Pathology

• Impairment - abnormality of structure/function

• Disability - functional consequence of impairment

• Handicap - social consequence of impairment

• QOL

• Survival

Page 4: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

Outcome measures/Stroke scales• Valid

• Reliable

• Reproducible

• Relevant

• Practical

• Sensitive

• Communicable

Page 5: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 6: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 7: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 8: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

Modified Rankin Scale

• measures the degree of disability or dependence in the daily activities of people who have suffered a stroke.

• originally introduced in 1957 by Rankin(Rankin J. Cerebral vascular accidents in patients over the age of 60. II. Prognosis. Scott Med J. 1957. 2: 200–15)

• modified by Lindley et al in 1994(Lindley RI, Waddell F, Livingstone M et al. Can simple questions assess outcomes after stroke?. Cerebrovasc Dis. 1994. 4: 314–24)

Page 9: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

3 simple questions (Lindley et al. 1994)

Is the patient alive?

Does the patient require help from anybody for everyday activities?

Has the stroke left the patient with any problems?

Dead

Poor

Indifferent

Good

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

6

5

4

3

1

2

0

Page 10: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

Modified Rankin Scale0 - No symptoms.

1 - No significant disability.Able to carry out all usual activities, despite some symptoms.

2 - Slight disability.Able to look after own affairs without assistance, but unable to carry out all previous activities.

3 - Moderate disability. Requires some help, but able to walk unassisted.

4 - Moderately severe disability. Unable to attend to own bodily needs without assistance, and unable tto walk unassisted.

5 - Severe disability. Requires constant nursing care and attention, bedridden, incontinent.

6 - Dead.

Page 11: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 12: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 13: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 14: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

mRS 0-3 mRS 4-6

Page 15: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 16: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS)

• 15-item neurologic examination stroke scale

• Used to evaluate the effect of acute cerebral infarction on:

– level of consciousness– extraocular movement– visual-field loss– motor strength– ataxia– sensory loss– language– dysarthria– neglect

Page 17: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

• Provides a quantitative measure of stroke-related neurologic deficit

• Originally designed as a research tool

• Now widely used as a clinical assessment tool

• May serve as a measure of stroke severity

• Valid for predicting lesion size, short and long term outcome

• Provides a common language for information exchanges among healthcare providers

National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS)

Page 18: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

• Designed to be:

– Simple– Valid– Reliable– Administered at the bedside consistently by:

• Physicians• Nurses• Therapists

• Should take <10 minutes to complete

National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS)

Page 19: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

NIHSS Instructions

• Administer NIHSS items in order

• Record performance in each category after assessment

• Do not go back and change scores

• Do not repeat assessments within NIHSS

• Range: 0-42

Page 20: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

1a Level of consciousness

Page 21: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

1b Level of consciousness questions

What is the month?

How old are you?

Page 22: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

1c Level of consciousness commands

Open and close

the eyes.

Grip and release the non-paretic hand.

Page 23: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

2 Best gaze

Page 24: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

3 Visual fields

Page 25: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

4 Facial palsy

Page 26: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

5 Motor - Arm

Page 27: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

6 Motor - Leg

Page 28: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

7 Limb ataxia

Page 29: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

8 Sensory

Page 30: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

9 Language

Page 31: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

10 Dysarthria

Page 32: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

11 Extinction and inattention

Page 33: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

NIHSS

Page 34: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 35: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

i NIHSS

Page 36: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

i NIHSS

Page 37: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.
Page 38: Using stroke scales to assess the patient – Rankin and NIHSS Dr Jonathan Birns Consultant in Stroke Medicine, Geriatrics and General Medicine Guy’s & St.

NIHSSNIHSS Category Pre-thrombolysis Time… after thrombolysis

LOC Ia 0 0

LOC Ib 2 0

LOC Ic 2 0

Gaze 0 0

Visual fields 2 0

Facial palsy 2 0

Motor – right arm 3 0

Motor – left arm 0 0

Motor – right leg 3 0

Motor – left leg 0 0

Ataxia 0 0

Sensory 2 0

Language 3 0

Dysarthria 0 0

Extinction 2 0