Exam

Mental Status Exam

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Mental Status Exam, Mental Status Screening, Mental State Exam, Mental Health Exam, Psychiatric Exam, Psychological Exam

  • Evaluation
  • Dementia Screening of Alert Patient
  1. Move to Dementia diagnostic tests below if positive screening
  2. See Mental Status Consolidated Screening
  3. Mini-Cognitive Assessment Instrument
    1. Patient repeats and recalls 3 unrelated words, and draws a clock face with a given time
  4. General Practitioner Assessment of Cognition (GPCOG)
    1. http://gpcog.com.au/uploads/ckfinder/userfiles/files/English_GPcog_20160329(1).pdf
    2. Four minute test that includes recall, time, orientation, clock drawing
  5. Ascertain Dementia 8-Item Informant Questionnaire
    1. https://www.alz.org/documents_custom/ad8.pdf
  6. Six Item Cognitive Impairment Test (6CIT)
    1. Designed as a Dementia screening tool for primary care
    2. Formulated from a regression analysis of the Blessed Information Memory Concentration (BIMC)
    3. Medical providers are allowed free usage (although copyrighted)
  7. Confusion Assessment Method (CAM)
    1. Assesses for Delirium
  1. Indicated for positive Dementia screening
  2. Saint Louis University Mental Status (SLUMS)
    1. http://medschool.slu.edu/agingsuccessfully/pdfsurveys/slumsexam_05.pdf
    2. Excellent, free alternative to the MMSE
  3. Copland's Short-Test of Mental Status
    1. Free scale with similar accuracy to MMSE
  4. Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination (ACE)
    1. Differentiates Alzheimer's from other Dementias
    2. Detect early Dementia
  5. Montreal Cognitive Assessment
    1. http://dementia.ie/images/uploads/site-images/MoCA-Test-English_7_1.pdf
  6. Blessed Information Memory Concentration (BIMC)
    1. Tests orientation, memory, concentration, naming
    2. Positive if >10 mistakes (out of 28 possible)
  7. Blessed Orientation Memory Concentration (BOMC)
    1. Shortened version of BIMC (6 questions)
    2. Positive if >10 mistakes
  8. Short Test of Mental Status (STMS)
    1. Tests orientation, attention, recall, and copying
    2. Also tests calculation, abstraction, clock drawing
    3. Positive if score <30 (out of 38 possible points)
  9. Mini-Mental Status Exam (MMSE)
    1. Requires payment for clinical use
  • Evaluation
  • Mental Status in the non-alert patient
  • Precautions
  1. Language and education heavily impact the mental state evaluation
  2. Patient must be able to understand questions and communicate answers
  • Protocol
  1. Interview patient alone, and then again with family
  2. Full Mental State Exam evaluates 11 criteria
  • Exam
  • General Appearance, Behavior and Attitude
  1. See Appearance, Behavior and Attitude Exam
  2. Appearance
    1. Posture
    2. Clothing and grooming
    3. Old or young appearing
    4. Healthy or sickly appearing
    5. Angry, puzzled, frightened, anxious, contemptuous, apathetic, paranoid
    6. Effeminate or masculine
    7. Scars or Tattoos
    8. Grooming or hygiene
  3. Motor Activity
    1. Mannerisms, gestures, twitches, picking
    2. Hand wringing or other Akathisia
    3. Clumsy
    4. Bradykinesia or Psychomotor retardation (slowed physical and emotional responses)
    5. Catatonia (immobile with muscular rigidity or inflexibility)
  4. Behavior
    1. Combative, hostile, guarded or irritable
    2. Rapid or pressured speech
    3. Candid, congenial or cooperative
    4. Withdrawn or shy
    5. Eye contact (fleeting, good, sporadic or none)
  5. Attitude toward examiner
    1. Cooperative or hostile
    2. Defensive, seductive, evasive, ingratiating
  6. Interpretation
    1. Psychotic: Disheveled, odd, grimacing
    2. Schizophrenic: Stare or blank look
    3. Paranoid: Agitated or hostile
    4. Depressed: Psychomotor retardation or mute
    5. Histrionic: Seductive manner
    6. Restlessness is seen in anxiety, mania, drug or Alcohol Withdrawal
    7. Provocative: Personality Disorder or trait
  • Exam
  • Alertness and Orientation
  1. Alertness Level
    1. See Level of Consciousness
    2. Hyperalert
    3. Alert
    4. Lethargy
  2. Orientation
    1. See Orientation Exam
    2. Person (name, age, year of birth)
    3. Place (current location, home address)
    4. Time (date, day of week, time of day, season, month)
      1. Time is the first orientation factor to be lost
    5. Situation (reason for encounter)
  3. Interpretation
    1. Minor Disorientation may be induced by stressors
    2. Major Disorientation or decreased alertness suggests organic cause (see Delirium)
  1. See Attention and Concentration
  2. Definitions
    1. Attends for short periods of time despite minor stimuli
    2. Attends for longer periods of time (concentrates)
  3. Tests
    1. Spell WORLD Backwards
    2. Serial 7s
      1. Subtract 7 from 100, then from 93, 86, 79, 72, 65, 58, 51, 44, 37, 30...
    3. Seraial 3s
      1. Subtract 3 from 20, then from 17, 14, 11, 8, 5
    4. Random Letter Test
      1. Examiner says each letter (one at a time): "S-A-V-E-A-H-A-A-R-T"
      2. Patient raises finger for each of the 4 A's
    5. Digit Span Test
      1. Patient repeats a series of numbers
      2. Start with 3 numbers, then 4 numbers, then 5 numbers and then 6 numbers
  4. Interpretation
    1. Significant deficits in attention are typically of organic cause
    2. Anxiety or Psychosis-related interrupted thoughts may also affect attention
  • Exam
  • Speech and Language
  1. See Speech Exam
  2. See Aphasia
  3. Characteristics
    1. Names objects (e.g. pen, watch, glasses, phone)
    2. Speech slow, fast or pressured
      1. Normal speech is >100 words per minute
      2. Abnormally slow is <50 words per minute
    3. Speech loud or soft
    4. Spontaneous speech or mute
    5. Good vocabulary?
    6. Articulates words with difficulty (Dysarthria)
    7. Language deficiency (Aphasia)
      1. Wrong words or poor grammar used
    8. Prosody
      1. Ability to recognize emotional context of language
      2. Ask patient to name the emotion
        1. Repeat a phrase (e.g. Why are you here?)
        2. Use different inflections (e.g. happy, suprised, excited, sad)
  4. Interpretation
    1. Psychotic: Rambling, bizarre speech (distinguish from Aphasia)
    2. Manic: Loud and rapid speech
    3. Depressed: Slow and soft speech
  • Exam
  • Mood and Affect
  1. Mood (Subjective)
    1. Constant emotional state (depression, euphoria, anxiousness, anger, irritability) the patient can describe
  2. Affect (Objective)
    1. Observable, current emotional state (flat, blunted, inappropriate)
    2. Facial Expressions (e.g. tearful, smiling, frowning)
  3. Interpretation
    1. Is Observed Affect consistent with Stated Mood?
    2. Is Stated Mood consistent with Thought Content?
  1. Thought Form
    1. See Disorganized Speech
    2. Logical flow of ideas or circumstantial with lengthy story of loosely related or unrelated details?
    3. Flight of ideas (rapidly moving from one idea to another related idea)?
    4. Evasive?
    5. Tangential (Loose Associations between unrelated thoughts, although connected in the patient's view)?
    6. Circumferential (multiple related thoughts expressed before answering a question)
    7. Perseveration (frequently repeated thought or phrase)?
    8. Blocking (interrupted speech or train of thought, only to be resumed minutes later)?
  2. Thought Content
    1. Preoccupation or Obsession
      1. Do you think about some things often?
      2. Do you ever feel suicidal or that life is not worth living?
      3. Do you ever have thoughts of hurting or killing someone else?
    2. Excessively suspicious, phobic, ritualistic?
      1. Do you think people are stealing from you?
      2. Are people talking about you behind your back?
    3. Hypochondriacal symptoms?
    4. Deja Vu Sensations?
    5. Depersonalization?
    6. Delusions (fixed false beliefs, such as persecutory, grandiose, influential)?
      1. Do you have strong ideas that other people rarely see the same way?
    7. Hallucinations
      1. See Perceptions below
      2. Do you ever hear or see things that other people do not see?
    8. Lack of Insight (unaware that thoughts are abnormal)?
    9. Concreteness (loss of abstract thinking)?
      1. Ask about relatedness between objects (what is similar?)
        1. Baseball and orange
        2. Car and train
        3. Desk and bookcase
        4. Happy and sad
      2. Test proverbs (what do these mean?)
        1. When the cats away, the mice will play
        2. You can lead a horse to water but you cannot make him drink
        3. Haste makes waste
        4. Ignorance is bliss
  3. Interpretation
    1. Abnormal Thought Process suggests Psychosis (especially Schizophrenia)
    2. Obsessions are seen in Psychosis and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
    3. Concreteness with normal intelligence suggests Psychosis (especially with bizarre or personalized answers)
  1. See Insight and Judgement
  2. Judgement
    1. Judgment is an assessment of real life problem-solving skills
    2. Testing
      1. What should you do if you find a stamped (not canceled) and addressed envelope?
  3. Insight
    1. Insight is an understanding of their condition (including abnormal thoughts)
    2. Testing
      1. Tell me about your illness and if it is worse now?
      2. What medications are you taking?
  1. Characteristics
    1. Misperceptions (wrong conclusions from straight-forward information)?
    2. Illusions (misinterpreted Sensations such as a shadow seen as a person)?
    3. Hallucinations (auditory, visual, tactile, olfactory)?
      1. Are Auditory Hallucinations accusatory, threatening or commanding?
  2. Interpretations
    1. Illusions occur in Delirium and Psychosis
    2. Hallucinations are most common in Psychosis
      1. Auditory Hallucinations are most often seen in Schizophrenia
      2. Visual Hallucinations occur most often in organic conditions
      3. Tactile Hallucinations are most common with Alcohol Withdrawal or Benzodiazepine Withdrawal
  • Exam
  • Memory
  1. See Memory Evaluation
  2. Immediate Memory
    1. See Digit Span Test (digit repetition)
    2. Three word recall at 5 minutes
    3. Interrupted counting
      1. Patient counts from 1 to 100
      2. Examiner interrupts at 27 and asks patient to wait 1 minute and then restart counting (at 27)
      3. Examiner interrupts at 42 and asks patient to wait 3 minutes and then restart counting (at 42)
  3. Recent memory
    1. How did you come to the hospital (e.g. car, Ambulance)?
  4. Remote memory
    1. Name four presidents in the last 100 years?
    2. What is your birthday?
    3. What are the names of your parents?
    4. Where were you born?
  5. Constructional ability
    1. Copy 2 shapes (e.g. a diamond and a 3 dimensional cube)
    2. Clock Drawing Test
  6. Interpretation
    1. Memory Loss or impaired construction ability suggests organic cause
  1. See Cognitive Function Testing
  2. Fund of knowledge
    1. Number of weeks in a year?
    2. How many nickels in $1.15?
    3. Name the last 6 presidents?
  3. Calculations
    1. Also see the attention tests above
    2. Clock Drawing Test
      1. Draw a clock at 11:10
    3. Trail Making Test
      1. Patient alternates connecting consecutive letters with numbers (A1,B2,C3,D4)
    4. Simple calculations
      1. Multiply 2x3, 5x3, 4x7
  4. Visuospatial
    1. Test Perception and manipulation of objects and shapes in space
    2. Patient copies intersecting pentagons or three dimensional cube
    3. Draw a triangle and ask patient to draw the same triangle, but upside down
  5. Intentional Motor Activity
    1. Show me how to use a hairbrush? hammer? pencil?
    2. Apraxia is an inability to carry out motor acts
  • References
  1. Tomb (1992) Psychiatry, 4th Ed, Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore, p. 6-11
  2. Zum, Swaminathan and Egan in Herbert (2014) EM:Rap 14(7): 11-13
  3. Norris (2016) Am Fam Physician 94(8): 635-41 [PubMed]
  4. Veauthier (2021) Am Fam Physician 104(5): 461-70 [PubMed]