Glasgow Coma Scale at 40 | The new approach to Glasgow Coma Scale assessment
Vložit
- čas přidán 4. 09. 2014
- www.glasgowcomascale.org
The Glasgow Coma Scale provides a practical method for assessment of impairment of conscious level in response to defined stimuli.
This video shows the new approach to the assessment of the Glasgow Coma Scale.
"Forty years since it was first described, the GCS has become an integral part of clinical practice and research across the World. We have now devised a new structured approach to assessment of the GCS to improve the accuracy, reliability and communication of the GCS. "
- Sir Graham Teasdale
Excellent video - good to have a single resource to refer to as every doctor seems to do it differently.
Clearly explains exactly how to perform this examination without using complex terminology; exceptionally clean cinematography is exceptionally helpful. This video seems accepting of the chance some may be distressed while trying to view and understand the GCS. Thank you.
Absolutely stunning! Informative and has nice cinematography!
Excellent explanation of the 15 parts of the scale and how we should always look at every part and not just the summaries.
Thanks Sir Teasdale and team!
Wonderful video! Thank you for clarifying something I have always had difficulty understanding how to perform.
Espetacular !!!
vídeo incrível, para nós estudantes é um Esclarecimento enorme
Thank you so much for this vid. It's perfect and very enlightening.
From a French nurse in intensive care :)
This is the best explanation of GCS thank you!
Precise, very good explanation :) thank you
I will be using this for my PBL, thank you. :)
An Excellent video very concise and a good resource for clinical examinations.
Perfect for to study. Thanks!
This is an excellent video .Thank you guys .
This was amazingly helpful. Thank you!
Great, informative video. Used in my research. Many thanks!
Excellent Video! Thank you so much!
Best vid on GCS,thanks!
Excelente recurso al alcance de todos . Felicidades.
Speechless how good is this video
Best explanation so far
That's good educational. Tks you for tranning by video :)
Wonderful to have Graham Teasdale introduce this clip. An excellent explanation (of course) but I would love to have additional explanation provided in terms of noting when a patient responds to Shout & SHAKE, as opposed to requiring 'pressure' stimulus; and to have the use of assessing limb strength explained in addition to best motor response. I find it can get messy with critically ill patients who may exhibit normal flexion response and then limb strength is assessed without a purposeful movement.
Excellent explanation. 🙏
Great video, thank you!
Thank you very much that was very helpful.
Very helpful and detailed !
very informative video! thank you
Perfect for study. Thanks
thanks for your helping .
very helpful, thank you!!!
Really such a great and informative video
Fantastic, many thanks
I had the pleasure of working for the Royal College Of Physicians And Surgeons of Glasgow and Sir Graham was our president at the time. I also had the pleasure of working with Sir Graham on the Wedding of one of his sons in the College Hall which turned out to be a very successful day and night and Sir Graham couldn't thank me enough. He was our President for 3 years and his successor was Dr Brian Willams who was another very nice President to work for
Explicação excelente ❤❤❤
Brilliant, thanks a lot
The best. Thank you alotttt.
Thank you so much Very helpful
just perfect.. thank u so much.
Very helpful thank you for the teaching.
thank you. It is very informative
Well done lads
Perfect!!
Is a very useful video, thank you
sehr gut gemacht!!
Best educational GCS video, thanks
p/s : neuosurgeon :P
Muhammad Nur Islam Zahari eh islam😂
Absolutely this videos is helpful.....
Vry nyc explanation..thnq u
excellent explanation
legal! parabéns pela atualização.
excellent video
very clear thank you
Excellent
great job thank you
Thanks will help me in practice :)
Thank you
so easy to understand
Thank u so much
very clear .
thanks chief
Thanku❤❤❤
Thank you very much, this is very informative and very helpful.
will be used in my presentation.
thanks!
Great video! A more realistic example of decerebrate and decorticate posturing would be helpful. In my experience it looks much more abnormal than this...more like a slow reflex action and not as brisk. Thanks for putting this together.
nice, thanks a lot
Perfect and effective way to learn ...tracheostomy seems mistaken for ET tube...
* supraorbital notch stimulation I read that it might encourage grimace and may not get pt to open eyes..
It is a tracheostomy. And supraorbital notch stimulation is for the motor response portion of the GCS. For the eyes, it is suggested you apply pressure to a nail.
Thanx alot
This video is good
love the voice-over and the video itself, very easy to remember d(^-^)
Excelente
"I'm a wonderful actress" - my sister. Kelsey you do make me laugh.
is she the girl in this video?
Interactive recap.
great thnk u
When called by using name, if the patient does not open his eyes, does not respond by sound and does not respond by any bodily movement can it be taken as least score in the GCS indicating coma?
thanh you
Eye opening to pain
Ni ka video yg madam suruh tengok?
Pupillary size has been added GCS
if paralyze from shoulder below how's the motor response ?
tnx
is there a document type of the info?
I thought we are no longer allowed to do a nail pinch?
The video is great but I just noticed something that needs to be corrected. Applying pressure at the tip of the nail as a peripheral pain stimulus won't work. Pressure should be applied on the nailbed instead.
TEM EM PORTUGUÊS?
It's awesome 👏🏻 the best method of education
But please can anyone write it just like an essay to understand it more ,because i can't speake English fluently !!! So it will be more easy to read it rather than hearing it
Anyone respond to me please because i have an exam 😭😭😭
Tyy
💐💐💐👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Very useful video, but I have a question: if the patient respond well to the command of opening mouth and stiching out his/her tongue but not respond to grasp and release my hand,should I examine him/her for localization or can l give him/her 6points for motor response and the same thing for trapezius pinch (positive response )and pressure to the supraorbital notch (negative response)should i give him/her the points or go to the next step ?
We aren't allowed to do nail pressure anymore (UK)
Can you do sternum rubs?
The voice actor sounds exactly like the voice in the podcast Unexplained.
I usually get the fist on the chest
Sternal rub is not a good way to assess response. After repeated assessments over days, the skin can break down and provides a portal for infection. I have seen this many times in my 30years + in ICU. The bruising and injuries caused by sternal rubs are in my opinion unacceptable and unnecessary. It constitutes assault. If I woke up in hospital with a chest injury caused by repeated sternal rubs, I would sue.
I don't know if this is relevant or will be helpful??? I was in a coma almost 2 years ago, I did rather well with the verbal response questions before my release from the hospital. But I only knew the right answers because I'd heard others talking about them, but the fact I remembered was still great. I have the attention span of a gnat now, and a speech impediment. If I might make a suggestion, the worst part, even above the pain, was waking up surrounded by people that assumed I knew what was going on (who I was, what I was, where I was), maybe let a person know there human, and they have a name, and what it is???
So what if a patient has a Verbal score of say, 4... what if they are perfectly alert but are too confused to follow the commands for the motor skills assessment -- seems strange that if they can't follow a 2-part movement request that we would just escalate the situation to a trap squeeze. Imagine hurting a patient with dementia, just because they couldn't perform a 2-part movement request.
cheers graham, but please make sure every institution is doing this right as they are not
3:47
5:15
😅❤
Withdraws, abnormal flexion, abnormal extension.
oh
Demo is good but the narration is very bad. @4:50 couldn't understand the term what he said. English is not hard but it's hard when the person speaking doesn't speak clearly.
H