Item Scoring, Clinical Applications, and Common
Assessment Challenges
Academic Review Paper
APEX NIH Stroke Scale Training — Group A Patients 1–6
Department of Neurology and Acute Stroke Care
June 2026
, Abstract
The National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) is a standardised
15-item neurological assessment tool used to quantify the severity of
stroke-related neurological deficits. This review paper examines the core
scoring principles, item-specific assessment protocols, and common clinical
challenges associated with NIHSS administration, drawing on 50 examination
items derived from the APEX NIHSS training programme for Group A (Patients
1–6). The paper is organised around four principal themes: (1) the structure
and purpose of the NIHSS; (2) detailed item-by-item scoring criteria; (3) special
considerations for untestable items, intubated patients, and pre-existing
conditions; and (4) the clinical significance of total scores in guiding acute
stroke treatment decisions. The analysis underscores the importance of accurate
and rapid administration, with a recommended completion time of
approximately five minutes, and highlights frequently confused scoring
distinctions that are critical for certification success.
Keywords: NIH Stroke Scale, NIHSS, stroke severity assessment, neurological
examination, APEX training, acute stroke, clinical scoring
1. Introduction
The National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) is a 15-item standardised
neurological examination instrument developed to objectively quantify the severity of
impairment caused by an acute ischemic or haemorrhagic stroke (Brott et al., 1989). The
scale evaluates deficits across multiple neurological domains—including level of
consciousness, gaze, visual fields, facial palsy, motor strength, ataxia, sensory function,
language, dysarthria, and extinction—producing a total score ranging from 0 (no deficit) to
42 (maximum deficit). The NIHSS has become the gold standard for initial stroke
assessment in emergency departments and is widely used to guide treatment decisions,
including eligibility for intravenous thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy (Lyden et
al., 2011).
Accurate and consistent administration of the NIHSS is essential, as scores directly
influence clinical decision-making and prognostication. The APEX NIHSS training
programme was developed to standardise clinician education and certification in NIHSS
administration. This review synthesises the key concepts assessed in the Group A training
module (Patients 1–6), organising them into thematic domains to provide a coherent
reference for clinicians and trainees preparing for NIHSS certification.
2. Structure and Purpose of the NIHSS
The NIHSS comprises 11 numbered item groups (1a through 11), some of which
contain multiple sub-items (e.g., Items 5 and 6 assess left and right limbs separately). While
the official form numbers items from 1 to 11, the assessment does not require a strict