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NIH Stroke Scale Sections 1-11 (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Complete UTHealth Houston Study Guide with Verified Q&A | NIHSS Administration, Scoring, and Certification | A+ Grade | UTHealth Houston Stroke Institute

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INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD – This is the complete NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) study guide developed in collaboration with UTHealth Houston Stroke Institute (Latest 2026/2027 Update) . The NIH Stroke Scale is an 11-item clinical evaluation instrument used to quantify the effects of acute cerebral ischemia and assess neurologic outcome after stroke . Scores range from 0 to 42, with higher scores indicating greater severity: 1-4 = mild, 5-15 = moderate, 16-20 = moderate to severe, 21-42 = severe . This guide covers administration procedures, scoring conventions, and clinical significance of NIHSS scores for treatment decisions (tPA eligibility typically considered for scores 4-25) . All items are administered in the order listed. The patient's first effort is scored without coaching. Scores should reflect what the patient actually does, not what the clinician thinks the patient can do . Untested items require written explanation. [section-truncated] 11 Extinction/Inattention (formerly Neglect): Score based on double simultaneous stimulation testing. Visual extinction (loses one finger on affected side when both sides simultaneously stimulated), tactile extinction, auditory extinction, personal neglect (does not recognize own hand), spatial neglect (orients to only one side of space). Score 2 for hemi-inattention involving more than one modality. NIH Stroke Scale UTHealth Houston NIHSS Sections 1 to 11 Complete Guide Stroke Severity Score Range 0 to 42 1a Level of Consciousness 0 Alert 3 Coma 1b LOC Questions Month and Age 0 Both Correct 2 Neither 1c LOC Commands Open Close Eyes Grip Release 0 Both 2 Neither 2 Best Gaze 0 Normal 1 Partial 2 Forced Deviation 3 Visual Fields 0 No Loss 1 Partial 2 Complete 3 Bilateral 4 Facial Palsy 0 Normal 1 Minor 2 Partial 3 Complete Motor Arm 90 Sitting 45 Supine Drift 10 Seconds 0 No Drift 1 Drift 2 Some Effort 3 No Effort 4 No Movement Motor Leg 30 Supine Drift 5 Seconds 0 No Drift 1 Drift 2 Some Effort 3 No Effort 4 No Movement 7 Limb Ataxia Finger Nose Heel Shin 0 Absent 1 One Limb 2 Two Limbs 8 Sensory Pinprick 0 Normal 1 Mild Moderate Loss 2 Severe Total Loss 9 Best Language 0 No Aphasia 1 Mild Moderate 2 Severe 3 Mute Global 10 Dysarthria 0 Normal 1 Mild Moderate 2 Severe 11 Extinction Inattention 0 Normal 1 One Modality 2 Multiple Modalities Total Score Calculation Mild 1 4 Moderate 5 15 Moderate Severe 16 20 Severe 21 42 tPA Eligibility NIHSS Score 4 to 25 A+ Grade NIHSS Study Guide

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NIH Stroke Scale / NHISS
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NIH Stroke Scale / NHISS

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UTHealth Houston




MAXE • SSHIN


UTH McGovern Medical School — Department of Neurology
WE MAKE BREAKTHROUGHS HAPPEN
EST. 1972




Comprehensive Guide to NIH Stroke Scale: Sections 1–11
C E RT I F I C AT I O N E X A M I N AT I O N P R E PA R AT I O N

INSTITUTION UTHealth Houston — McGovern Medical COURSE CODE NIHSS-101
School
PROGRAM NIH Stroke Scale Certification ACADEMIC YEAR
EXAM TITLE Comprehensive Guide — Sections 1–11 TOTAL QUESTIONS 44 Questions
CERTIFICATION AHA/ASA NIHSS Certification FORMAT Multiple Choice — Select the Single Best
Answer


EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each question based on the NIH Stroke Scale protocol.
▸ Scores must reflect what the patient actually does — not what the clinician believes the patient can do.
▸ Scores should never be changed after initial recording.
▸ For intubated, comatose, or amputee patients, record as Untestable (UN) and document the reason.
▸ Correct answers and clinical rationales appear below each question for certification review.


SECTION I — GENERAL PRINCIPLES, LOC, BEST GAZE & VISUAL FIELDS Questions 1 – 44

1. What should be recorded after each subscale exam during the NIH Stroke Scale assessment?
A. The patient's baseline function before the stroke
B. Performance in each category
C. An overall global impression of the patient
D. Only the abnormal findings
CORRECT ANSWER B — Performance in each category

RATIONALE The NIHSS is an 11-item scale (scored 0–42) that requires systematic documentation of performance in each
subscale category immediately after assessment. Each item is scored individually and then summed.
Recording performance per category ensures accuracy, prevents recall bias, and provides a reproducible
neurological assessment that can be tracked over time for clinical decision-making and research purposes.

, 2. When should NIH Stroke Scale scores be changed after initial recording?
A. When the supervising physician disagrees with the score
B. After discussion with the patient's family about baseline function
C. Scores should not be changed after they are recorded
D. At the end of the shift during documentation review
CORRECT ANSWER C — Scores should not be changed after they are recorded

RATIONALE NIHSS protocol explicitly states that scores must never be changed after recording. This preserves the
integrity and reproducibility of the assessment. If an error is suspected, a new assessment should be
performed and documented separately with a new time stamp. Retrospectively altering scores undermines
the validity of serial neurological examinations, compromises treatment decisions (including tPA eligibility),
and introduces bias into clinical trials data.


3. What should NIH Stroke Scale scores reflect?
A. What the clinician thinks the patient can do based on premorbid status
B. What the patient does, not what the clinician thinks the patient can do
C. The patient's best effort after coaching and encouragement
D. An average of the patient's performance over the past 24 hours
CORRECT ANSWER B — Scores should reflect what the patient does, not what the clinician thinks the patient can do

RATIONALE This is a fundamental NIHSS principle. The examiner scores observable performance at the moment of
assessment — not potential, not estimated premorbid function. If the patient cannot or will not perform a
task, they are scored accordingly. Do not coach, cajole, or make allowances. This objective approach
standardizes scoring across examiners and institutions, which is essential for determining tPA eligibility and
monitoring stroke progression.


4. What is the scoring for Alertness (Level of Consciousness — 1a) when the patient is alert and keenly responsive?
A. Score 1
B. Score 2
C. Score 0
D. Score 3
CORRECT ANSWER C — 0 = Alert; keenly responsive

RATIONALE LOC 1a is scored 0 when the patient is alert and responds immediately and appropriately to the examiner's
presence and questions with no stimulation required. Score 1 requires minor stimulation to respond; score 2
requires repeated stimulation or is obtunded; score 3 is reflexive or unresponsive. Level of consciousness is
the first and most fundamental component of the NIHSS as it influences scoring of all subsequent items.


5. What does a score of 1 indicate in Level of Consciousness (1a)?
A. Alert and keenly responsive
B. Not alert; requires repeated stimulation to attend, or is obtunded
C. Not alert; but arousable by minor stimulation to obey, answer, or respond
D. Responds only with reflex motor or autonomic effects, or totally unresponsive
CORRECT ANSWER C — Not alert; but arousable by minor stimulation to obey, answer, or respond

RATIONALE Score 1 indicates the patient is drowsy but can be aroused to full alertness with minimal stimulation (verbal
prompting, light touch). The key distinction from Score 2 is that Score 1 patients, once aroused, can obey
commands and answer questions. Score 2 patients require stronger or repeated stimulation and do not
maintain alertness without continued stimulation.

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