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Neurology · Stroke

NIHSS Calculator

The NIH Stroke Scale quantifies stroke severity across 15 domains. Used to track neurological change over time and inform acute treatment decisions.

What is the NIHSS?

The NIH Stroke Scale is the standard tool for quantifying neurological deficit after acute stroke, scoring 15 domains from level of consciousness through language and inattention. It grew out of earlier work by Brott and colleagues, published in Stroke in 1989, and became central to acute stroke trials and treatment-eligibility decisions (alongside time-window and imaging criteria) from the 1990s onward.

How to calculate the NIHSS

Each of the 15 items is scored independently using its own defined scale (shown above), and the total is the sum across all items - ranging from 0 (no deficit) to 42 (maximum deficit). The breakdown by domain matters as much as the total, since it shows which neurological systems are affected.

Some items have an "untestable" option (e.g. prior amputation, joint fusion, or intubation preventing assessment) - these are recorded separately per the official NIHSS instructions rather than forced into the standard numeric scale, since this affects how the total should be interpreted.

Interpretation

ScoreSeverity
0No stroke symptoms
1–4Minor stroke
5–15Moderate stroke
16–20Moderate-to-severe stroke
21–42Severe stroke

Important note

Reliable clinical use of the NIHSS requires formal training and certification - this calculator is a learning aid for understanding the scale's structure and scoring, not a substitute for certified bedside assessment in real patient care.

References

Brott T, Adams HP Jr, Olinger CP, et al. Measurements of acute cerebral infarction: a clinical examination scale. Stroke. 1989.

See also: Cranial Nerves OSCE Guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need certification to use the NIHSS clinically?

Yes, for real patient care — formal training and certification are required for reliable, reproducible scoring. This calculator is a learning aid for understanding its structure.

How are 'untestable' items handled?

Items like motor testing in an amputated limb are recorded separately per official NIHSS instructions rather than forced into the standard numeric scale, since this affects how the total should be interpreted.