
- 320 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
The Mental Status Examination Handbook E-Book
About this book
The ability to effectively assess cognitive and other behavioral functions is an essential skill for neurologists, psychiatrists, geriatricians, nurses, and other clinicians who perform clinic and bedside examinations. Unique in the field, The Mental Status Examination Handbook is a user-friendly, comprehensive resource that provides practical guidance on cognitive assessment, clarifies mental status testing procedures, and assists with decision making for neuropsychological referrals. This detailed manual draws from the full history of behavioral neurology testing, making the complex and challenging area of cognitive assessment accessible for both students and practitioners.- Offers guidance on how to choose and perform a large number of mental status tests, with information on selected test materials and normative values.- Covers the bedside evaluation of arousal, attention, memory, language, perception, executive abilities, and other cognitive and behavioral areas.- Provides an authoritative assessment and compendium of commonly used mental status scales, inventories and questionnaires.- Describes relevant correlations with formal neuropsychological testing, neuroimaging, and neuropsychiatric disease.- Explains how to weigh, use, and understand mental status scales and neuropsychological instruments.- Discusses the meaning of cognitive symptoms and signs, and their neuroanatomical and neuropathological correlations.
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Information
Overview of the Mental Status Examination
Brief MSX
| Awareness | Observation for awareness; if necessary, loudly call name, sternal pressure, pinch Achilles tendon. |
| Orientation | What is the date (day, month, year, day of week, time)? Where are we; the name of this place, city, state, floor/location? |
| Attention | Digit span forward (until misses two trials at a level); If necessary, subtraction by 7s from 100 (or by 3s from 20). |
| Language | Naming of six common items in the room or pictures/drawings; if necessary, ask for as many names of animals in a 1 minute. |
| Memory | Give three to four unrelated words for subsequent recall in 1 or more minutes; (during delay period, can ask for three recent or current events). |
| Perception | Copy a three-dimensional āNeckerā cube; if necessary, add two-dimensional drawing (e.g., intersecting pentagons). |


Overview of the NBSE
- 1. General Behavioral Observations. The experienced examiner begins with a thoughtful inspection of the patient's overt behavior and interactions with others and the environment. The patient's general behavior may be the only method of assessment available in a very uncooperative, agitated, or arousal-impaired patient. Yet, careful behavioral observations in and of themselves can provide a very informative mental status assessment. If the patient is sufficiently awake and aware, further consideration of his/her general behavior includes attention to the patient's appearance, attitude, and affect. For example, a slovenly appearance with poor personal hygiene can reflect dementia, psychosis, depression, apathy, and other behavioral disturbances. Specific findings such as neglect of one side of the body can indicate a focal hemispheric insult. Patients may be cooperative, indifferent, disinterested in the interview, or hostile. The examiner also considers their prevailing affect, whether it reflect...
Table of contents
- Cover Image
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Section I Fundamentals of Mental Status Testing
- Section II Mental Status Testing
- Section III Scales or Inventories, Neuropsychological Tests, and Computerized Techniques
- Appendix A Index of Mental Status Tasks
- Appendix B Mental Status Scales
- Key Select References
- Index