Lesson 1Mental status and language assessment: orientation, attention, naming, repetition, comprehension tests for aphasia detectionFocuses on quick bedside checks of consciousness, orientation, attention, memory, and language areas, including naming, repetition, fluency, and comprehension, to spot aphasia, delirium, and mild cognitive issues.
Level of consciousness and arousalOrientation and short‑term memoryAttention and working memory testsNaming, repetition, and fluencyComprehension and command followingLesson 2Special bedside tests: brief seizure mimic assessments (postictal confusion, tongue biting, incontinence), TIA mimics, and orthostatic vital signsReviews targeted bedside tests to identify seizure and TIA mimics, including postictal signs, tongue injury, incontinence, psychogenic features, and orthostatic vital signs, to distinguish real vascular events from others.
Postictal confusion and recovery profileTongue biting and incontinence cluesFeatures suggesting psychogenic eventsScreening for common TIA mimicsOrthostatic blood pressure and pulseLesson 3Sensory exam: pinprick/light touch, proprioception, cortical sensory signs, and sensory extinction/neglect testingCovers bedside testing of primary and cortical sensory functions, including pinprick, light touch, vibration, proprioception, graphesthesia, and extinction, stressing patterns that separate peripheral, spinal, brainstem, and cortical lesions.
Pinprick and light touch techniqueVibration and joint position senseTesting graphesthesia and stereognosisDetecting extinction and neglectPatterns of sensory level and hemibody lossLesson 4Cranial nerve exam targeted to this presentation: facial symmetry, dysarthria vs aphasia, gaze, visual fields (confrontation), and pupillary assessmentDetails a targeted cranial nerve screen for suspected stroke, including facial symmetry, dysarthria versus aphasia, eye movements, visual fields by confrontation, and pupils, emphasising quick techniques and key localisation patterns.
Rapid facial symmetry assessmentDistinguishing dysarthria from aphasiaBedside gaze and eye movement testingConfrontation visual field techniquesPupillary size, reactivity, and anisocoriaLesson 5How to record focused exam findings clearly and translate into localisation statementsExplains how to organise focused neurological findings, use standard terms, and turn raw observations into short localisation statements that guide differential diagnosis, imaging choices, and urgent management decisions.
Standard neurologic note structureKey normal and abnormal exam phrasesLinking signs to lesion localizationWriting one‑line localization summariesLesson 6Gait and balance assessment: timed gait, tandem walk, and assessment for fall risk or intermittent collapseProvides a structured approach to gait and balance, including timed walks, tandem gait, Romberg, and observation for freezing, ataxia, or collapse, to assess fall risk and localise cerebellar, sensory, or frontal gait issues.
Observation of stance and initiationTimed gait and turning assessmentTandem walk and Romberg testingIdentifying ataxic and frontal gaitsScreening for intermittent collapseLesson 7Motor exam: tone, power grading, focal weakness patterns, pronator drift, and rapid bedside tests for subtle hemiparesisOutlines a targeted motor exam emphasising tone, power grading, pronator drift, quick strength screens, and subtle asymmetries, with patterns that separate upper from lower motor neuron weakness and functional disorders.
Assessing bulk and involuntary movementsGrading power using MRC scaleEvaluating tone and spastic catchPronator drift and orbiting testsRapid screening for subtle hemiparesisLesson 8Coordination and cerebellar testing: finger-nose, heel-shin, dysdiadochokinesia and interpretation in focal cortical vs cerebellar causesDescribes bedside coordination testing with finger-nose-finger, heel-knee-shin, rapid alternating movements, and rebound, and explains how to separate cerebellar, sensory, and cortical causes of limb incoordination.
Finger‑nose‑finger performance errorsHeel‑knee‑shin and truncal ataxiaRapid alternating movement testingRebound and overshoot phenomenaDifferentiating sensory from cerebellar ataxia