✅ I will be checking the power point and the book to add other stuff in this and the previous note.
🔄 Recap of Previous Classes
- Age considerations:
- Loss of taste (may be age-related)
- Dry tongue (medication-related).
- Presentation matters → food should look good & colorful to encourage eating.
- Normal face changes: Loss of facial fat, dentures affect appearance, skin loses elasticity, skin tags, wrinkles
Skin Tags
Ears 👂
- Cranial Nerve VIII → Acoustic Or Vestibulocochlear (hearing, balance). (Either name both are correct, Both refers to the same thing)
- Tests:
- Whisper test
- Weber (bone conduction)
- Rinne (air conduction) Air conduction should be Higher than bone conduction, usually is 2 times higher.
- Normal finding:
- Tympanic membrane grayish
- could have scars (witch is normal, it means previous ear infection, or small damages that cicatrized)
- moves when coughing.
- Tinnitus (ringing, buzzing sound), sometimes with blurring. Not normal in most situations.
- Cerumen impaction → (cerumen) builds up in the ear canal and blocks it. Affects hearing.
Nose 👃
- Septum perforation → could mean cocaine use or piercings.
Mouth 👄
- Frenulum (Tissue that holds the tongue) → assists with speech.
- Some people have their tongue to attach to the floor of the mouth so they required the frenulum to be cut in surgery.
- Tonsillitis → inflammation of tonsils/uvula → it could mean infection.
- Cranial nerves IX, X, XII → swallowing, taste, tongue movement.
- Dentures → must always check them.
🧾 Chapter 24 – Neurological System
Anatomy & Physiology
- Nervous system → CNS + PNS.
- Cerebral cortex → thought, memory, sensation, voluntary movement.
- Lobes: frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal.
- The stroke in different areas will have different consequences. If u see a blacked area u can give something to help remove the cloth, if active bleeding u can't do anything to help.
- Crossover →
- left brain damage → right body symptoms.
- right brain damage → left body symptoms.
- Cerebellum → coordination, balance, posture.
- Reflexes:
- Nurses usually only test plantar reflex.
- Babinski response should be absent in adults.
- The Babinski sign is a neurological reflex that causes the big toe to extend upward and the other toes to fan out when the sole of the foot is stroked. It is a normal reflex in infants but indicates damage to the brain or spinal cord in children over two years old and adults. A positive Babinski sign suggests a problem with the corticospinal tract, a pathway of nerves from the brain to the spinal cord
- Aging → decreased cerebral blood flow → slower responses.
Neurological Assessment
- Subjective questions:
- History of stroke?
- Difficulty swallowing?
- Problems with coordination?
- Environmental hazards at home?
- Objective assessment:
- Mental status (sensory checked before mental in elderly).
- Cranial nerves (know number, name, function).
- Motor function.
- Sensory function.
- Reflexes.
Cranial Nerve Testing
Imagine you have food in front of you, you close your eyes and then:
Smell the food CN I
Look the food CN II
Move your eyes towards the food CN III
- CN II (Optic) → vision at 20 ft, accommodation (finger).
- CN III, IV, VI → extraocular movements, pupils (PERRLA).
- CN V (Trigeminal) → sensory (cotton), motor (jaw/teeth clench).
- CN VII (Facial) → smile, frown, eyebrows, eye closure.
- CN VIII (Acoustic) → whisper test.
- CN IX, X (Glossopharyngeal, Vagus) → “Ahhhh,” uvula and palate rise.
- CN XI (Accessory) → shoulder shrug, head resistance.
- CN XII (Hypoglossal) → tongue midline (“Light, tight, dynamite”).
Motor & Coordination
- Upper extremities:
- Arms forward x5 sec, finger squeeze.
- Lower extremities:
- Leg raise x5 sec, foot resistance.
- Coordination tests:
- Finger-to-finger
- Finger-to-nose
- Heel-to-shin
- RAM (Rapid Alternating Movements) (Tested together with Finger to Finger)
Balance & Gait
- Nursing consideration: When pt. sit or stand ask if they are feeling dizzy before make them walk, and while walking ask if they are ok.
- Stand feet together, arms at side, eyes closed.
- Walk normally, turn, walk back.
- Tandem walking → heel-to-toe (“drunk test”).
- Could be normal or abnormal
- Romberg sign → stand still w/ eyes closed for 20 sec.
- Positive Romberg Test: The patient loses balance or sways significantly when their eyes are closed.
- Negative Romberg Test: The patient maintains balance well with their eyes closed.
This indicates that proprioception and vestibular function are likely normal.
Sensory System
- Light touch (cotton), sharp/dull, temperature, pain.
- Stereognosis → identify object in hand.
- Graphesthesia → identify number/letter drawn on palm.
- the ability to recognize letters, numbers, or symbols written on the skin by touch
- Two-point discrimination → identify where touched if right or left hand or leg.
- Types of paralysis: hemiplegia, paraplegia, etc.
⚡ Key Takeaways / Important for Exam
- 🔹 Know ALL cranial nerves by name, number, and function.
- 🔹 ABCT mental assessment – Appearance, Behavior, Cognition, Thought process.
- 🔹 Always screen for suicide → put on watch until psych clears.
- 🔹 Glasgow Coma Scale → Normal 15, <7 severe, 3 = no response.
- 🔹 Cerebellum = coordination & balance (important).
- 🔹 Only plantar reflex tested by nurses.
- 🔹 Stroke patients → must assess swallowing before giving food/drink. Don’t assume that if they can talk they can swallow.
- 🔹 Recap tests to memorize: Whisper, Weber, Rinne, Romberg, Four Word Test, Graphesthesia, Stereognosis.
Read Level of consciousness
Read chapter 5 abnormalities.
- Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
- Normal = 15
- <7 = severe impairment → requires referral.
- 3 = no motor response.
Think "EVM" for the three parts:
- Eye response: scored from 1 to 4.
- Verbal response: scored from 1 to 5.
- Motor response: scored from 1 to 6.