Cranial Nerve Exam

Gain confidence with one of the most integral parts of the neurological exam and streamline your note-taking during the exam with Carepatron’s dedicated Cranial Nerve Exam template.

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What Is a Cranial Nerve Exam?

The Cranial Nerve Exam forms an important part of the complete neurological examination and involves examining the functioning of the cranial nerves; twelve pairs of nerves connecting directly to the brain and terminating at various locations throughout the body.

Each cranial nerve is assigned a number according to its position along the longitudinal axis of the brain and is commonly denoted “CN”, followed by the roman numeral of the cranial nerve number, e.g. “CN X” for the tenth cranial nerve, also called the vagus nerve2

A Cranial Nerve Exam is a structured examination designed to check each cranial nerve in turn, using various methods which can usually be completed with equipment readily available in a hospital environment3. Although this exam can be completed relatively quickly without specialized equipment, it has many different parts that must be completed in succession to assess each of the cranial nerves thoroughly – and that’s where Carepatron’s Cranial Nerve Exam template can help. Just keep reading to find out how!

Printable Cranial Nerve Exam

Download this Cranial Nerve Exam and effectively conduct a neurological exam.

How To Use This Cranial Nerve Exam Template

Need a quick memory refresh on how to examine each cranial nerve? We’ve got you covered with our concise cranial nerve exam how-to based on the Oxford Medical Education Cranial Nerve Examination guidelines4.

Olfactory (CN I)

Question the patient on any recent change in sense of taste or smell, or formally assess using smelling bottles, e.g. coffee or peppermint occluding one nostril at a time. 

Optic (CN II)

Assess acuity using a Snellen chart at 6m covering one eye in turn. Test peripheral fields by confrontation and check visual neglect.

Oculomotor (CN III), Trochlear (CN IV) and Abducens (CN VI)

These three nerves are tested at once. Check primary position, diplopia, smooth pursuit and saccadic eye movements.

Trigeminal (CN V)

For the trigeminal nerve, assess ophthalmic, maxillary, and mandibular sensory branches with a piece of cotton wool. Inspect for wasting of the masseter and temporalis muscles and check for jaw resistance strength. Check corneal and jaw-jerk reflexes. 

Facial (CN VII)

Ask the patient to scrunch up their eyes, look upwards and raise their eyebrows, puff out their cheeks and show their teeth and inspect for facial asymmetry. 

Vestibulocochlear (auditory) (CN VIII)

Perform gross hearing assessment followed by a Rinne test, Weber’s test, otoscopy and audiometry if hearing loss is detected. 

Glossopharyngeal (CN IX) and Vagus (CN X)

Assess for dysarthria or dysphonia, ask the patient to say “aah” and inspect soft palate and uvula, perform a swallow assessment or assessment of gag reflex. 

Spinal Accessory (CN XI)

Ask the patient to raise their shoulders then turn their head and keep them there while you provide resistance. 

Hypoglossal (CN XII)

Inspect the tongue for wasting and fasciculations, ask the patient to protract their tongue and inspect for deviation, test the tongue strength against each cheek.

Once you have completed the testing for each of the cranial nerves, the next steps will depend on your clinical findings, and the results of any further testing or imaging they have undertaken. Ensure you store your patient’s cranial nerve exam notes securely in their medical record. 

Cranial Nerve Exam Example (Sample)

For examples of the sorts of things you could write for each stage of the cranial nerve exam, look no further than our example Cranial Nerve Exam template. This example is based on a fictional, normal cranial nerve exam and should illustrate how to use this template when conducting a cranial nerve exam. Take a look at the sample template below, or download the PDF version to save it locally. 

Download this Cranial Nerve Exam Example (Sample) here:

Cranial Nerve Exam Example (Sample)

When Would You Typically Use A Cranial Nerve Exam?

While the cranial nerve exam aims to test the proper functioning of the cranial nerves, its broader purpose is to localize neuropathology as part of a complete neurological exam. 

Clinical indications for a cranial nerve exam include3:

  • Trauma or traumatic brain injury (TBI)
  • Unconsciousness or coma
  • Intracranial hemorrhage
  • Stroke
  • Cerebral aneurysm

Who Can Use these Printable Cranial Nerve Exams?

The cranial nerve exam is part of the complete neurological examination and requires training and skill to perform correctly and efficiently. As such, the only professionals who should be performing cranial nerve exams are qualified healthcare practitioners with formal training in physical and neurological examination, or students/trainees of one of these professions under appropriate supervision. Those who may find this template particularly useful include:

Why Is This Assessment Popular With General Practitioners?

General practitioners have the formidable task of maintaining professional knowledge across a broad range of clinical areas, and so any tool that can help to maintain quality in one of these areas will likely be a welcome one! Our Cranial Nerve Exam template is just the sort of tool that can help General Practitioners deliver quality care, even if they don’t perform neurological exams every day. 

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Commonly asked questions

How do I conduct a Cranial Nerve Exam?

Like with any clinical examination, there is some variation in how you choose to assess each of the cranial nerve exams, but some things should remain constant every time you conduct an assessment. These include gathering the required equipment, checking the patient’s name and date of birth, introducing yourself, explaining the examination in understandable language, and gaining consent to proceed with the examination.

What are the limitations of a Cranial Nerve Exam?

There are some contra-indications for the cranial nerve exam such as facial trauma or swelling that may prevent proper assessment of, for example, CN III, CN IV, and CN IV. With advances in imaging technology, the results of a cranial nerve exam are no longer the sole method for diagnosing lesions, however, the cranial nerve exam remains an important part of the neurological exam and one that can be performed quickly with minimal equipment.

What are the next steps after the Cranial Nerve Exam?

This will depend on the findings of the cranial nerve exam. The next steps following the cranial nerve exam could include further neurological testing, formal hearing assessments, speech examinations, or neuroimaging.

Benefits Of Free Cranial Nerve Exam Template

Structure your cranial nerve exam

This template has the dual purpose of serving as a pre-formatted record for your clinical findings, but also as a structure for the exam itself. Each row separates the nerve or group of nerves that must be assessed and can help keep you on track and ensure you don’t accidentally skip any during the examination.

Keep your findings organized

Staying organized is a superpower for busy clinicians. Our cranial nerve exam template will help you keep your notes from the cranial nerve exam clearly laid out and understandable. 

Easily share results with other practitioners

Your colleagues will thank you for using a clearly formatted cranial nerve exam template, as they can quickly understand your findings and move on to making informed treatment decisions rather than spending time decoding a chaotic exam note.

Standardize your cranial nerve exams

It’s essential you offer all your patients the same high level of care, and the cranial nerve exam is no different. By using the same template for each exam, you can demonstrate your efforts to standardize your practice and deliver the same high-quality examination to every patient. 

Go fully digital

Finally, this exam template can be filled out and shared entirely digitally; no more printing and scanning is needed! This has huge benefits for you and your colleagues in time-saving, as well as improving your information security.  

Why Use Carepatron For Cranial Nerve Exam Software?

Our cranial nerve exam template isn’t the only way Carepatron can save general practitioners time.

Carepatron is the perfect partner to reduce your practice’s admin work. Utilize Carepatron’s AI-powered dictation software and get your clinic notes down in record time, or offer your patients their own portal within Carepatron to access digital documentation and their medical records. 

Strike the perfect balance between accessibility and security with Carepatrons mobile and desktop platforms, each equipped with HIPAA-compliant, bank-level data encryption- meaning your patients’ documentation will be secure, and available whenever you need it. 

And best of all, join a community of over 10,000+ motivated healthcare professionals contributing to Carepatron’s library of resources ranging from progress notes to intake forms all designed to take your practice to the next level. 

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References

  1. Damodaran O, Rizk E, Rodriguez J, Lee G. Cranial nerve assessment: a concise guide to clinical examination. Clin Anat. 2014 Jan;27(1):25-30. 
  2. Martini, F., Ober, W., Nath, J., Bartholomew, E., & Petti, K. (2017). Visual Anatomy and Pathology. New York: Pearson Education Inc.
  3. Reese V, M Das J, Al Khalili Y. Cranial Nerve Testing. [Updated 2022 Sep 26]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing.
  4. Cranial Nerve Examination. (2015, June). Retrieved from Oxford Medical Education:https://oxfordmedicaleducation.com/clinical-examinations/cranial-nerve-examination
How do I conduct a Cranial Nerve Exam?
How do I conduct a Cranial Nerve Exam?
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