Glasgow Coma Scale
The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is a neurological assessment scale which aims to give a reliable, objective way of quantifying level of consciousness. It is the most common scoring system used to describe the level of consciousness in a person following a traumatic brain injury. Basically, it is used to help gauge the severity of an acute brain injury.
The Glasgow Coma Score is also used as part of the APACHE II assessment score for Critical Care Program and the MOST assessment score for Medicine Program. Due to this use as part of APACHE we need the best GCS in the first 24 hrs (unlike all other APACHE elements).
The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
Instructions
Select the best Eye, Motor or Verbal response in the first 24 hours after admission to ICU from the dropdown lists in CCMDB.mdb.
Special Cases
The below are only meant to help you use your judgement keeping in mind that our purpose for the GCS is to understand the severity of a brain injury, and how it should impact, the APACHE score, i.e. the best status of the patient within the first 24hrs of admission.
Patients with normally limited communication ability
For patients whose ability to communicate are reduced due to pre-existing conditions, score as fully functioning if they are able to function at the level that is normal for this patient. (e.g. Down's syndrome)
Patients who fail assessments for reasons other than consciousness
Patients who are aphasic or intubated but clearly can communicate in writing should be coded as functioning normally. Same is true for patients whose eyes are swollen shut etc. [3]
Medicated Patients
If a patient is unable to respond to GSC questions because they are medicated (e.g. sedated or paralyzed), and there is no reason to expect that their response would be impaired if they were not medicated, they can be scored to a GCS assessment immediately prior to medication if available, e.g. from the ER. If the patient is sedated and there is no documented GCS prior to sedation, you can use a GCS assessment once the sedation is reduced if it is close to the 24 hour mark.
GSC dropdown list and scores
Best Eye
Value | Points |
1 none | 1 |
2 to pain | 2 |
3 to speech | 3 |
4 spontaneous | 4 |
Best Motor
Value | Points |
1 None | 1 |
2 abn. extension | 2 |
3 abn. flexion | 3 |
4 withdraws to pain | 4 |
5 localizes pain | 5 |
6 obeys commands | 6 |
Best Verbal
Value | Points |
1 oriented + conv. | 5 |
2 disoriented + conv. | 4 |
3 inappropriate words | 3 |
4 incomp. Sounds | 2 |
5 no response | 1 |
6 ventilated-appear oriented | 5 |
7 ventilated-?questionably oriented | 3 |
8 ventilated-no response | 1 |