Mental Status
Assessment
What is Mental Status ?
A person’s emotional and cognitive
functioning.
Mental disorder “A significant
behavioral or psychological pattern
associated with distress or disability and has
a significant risk of pain, disability, or death,
or a loss of freedom”.
Assessment of an individual’s
behaviors:
Consciousness- being aware of one’s own feelings and
thoughts.
Language- the humanness of a person depends on his
ability to communicate.
Mood and Affect- expressions of feelings or state of
mind.
Orientation- awareness in relation to self.
Attention- ability to focus; power of concentration.
•Abstract reasoning- ability to analyze the things
that observed.
•Thought process- the way a person thinks.
•Thought content- what the person thinks.
•Perceptions- awareness of objects through five
senses.
•Memory- ability to lay down and store
experiences.
Components of Mental Status
Examination.
A-appearance
B-behavior
C-cognitive function
T-thought process and perceptions
Assessing mental health
Appearance
Posture
Anxiety – sitting on edge of bed, tense muscles, frowning,
restless, pacing (Hyperthyroidism?)
Depression – sitting slumped in a chair, slow walk, dragging
feet
Body movements
Normal – voluntary, deliberate, coordinated, smooth and even
Anxiety – restless, fidgety
Depression – apathy, slow movements
Schizophrenia – bizarre gestures, facial grimaces
Dress
Eccentric dress occurs with schizophrenia or manic syndrome
Hygiene
Note change from previously well-groomed appearance to one
that is disheveled - depression
Obsessive compulsive disorder – meticulously dressed and
groomed
Assessing Mental Health
Behavior
Consciousness (LOC)
Facial expression
Look is appropriate for the situation
Flat, masklike expression in Parkinson’s and
depression
Language – physical ability to speak, word choice
Mood and affect
Mood – more temporary expression of emotions
Affect – more permanent display of feelings
Assessing Mental Health
Cognitive Function
Orientation – person, place, time
Disorientation occurs with dementia, delirium
Attention – give orderly instructions and ask pt. to perform
Memory – short and long term
Abstract reasoning
Problem solving and reasoning abilities
Must keep in mind patient’s education level
Thought Processes and Perceptions
Thought process – Logic. How a person thinks.
Thought content – What a person thinks.
Perceptions
How do people treat you? What do people say when they talk about
you?
Assessing Mental Health
Suicide precautions
Risk factors
Prior suicide attempts
Depression
Verbal messages to kill self
Death themes in talk, jokes
Giving away possessions
Assessing
“Have you ever thought about hurting yourself?”
“Do you plan to hurt yourself now?”
“Have you ever hurt yourself in the past?
Mini-Mental State Examination
Assessing Mental Status of the
Aging Adult
1. Conduct brief exam of older people admitted to the
hospital.
2. Check physiologic status before assessing any aspect
of mental status
3. Assessing behavior
LOC- The Glasgow Coma Scale is used for aging
persons in the hospital
4. Cognitive Functions
Orientations- assess if pt. knows where he/she is; and
the present period.
5. Use set test as supplemental mental status exam for
people 65-85 years old.
a. Ask to name 10 items each categories of sets:
Fruits
Animals
Colors
Towns
b. Do not hurry or prompt a person
Maximum total is 40
A score >25 means a person has no dementia
Score <15 indicate dementia
Scores between 15 and 24 show less association
c. Do not use set test for patients with hearing impairment.
Documentation of MSA
Appearance- Person’s posture is erect; dress and
grooming are appropriate for age.
Behavior- Person is alert, w/ appropriate facial
expression and understandable speech.
Cognitive Functions-Oriented to time, person, place.
Recent and remote memory intact; can recall 4 unrelated
words at 5-10 and 30 minutes intervals.
Thought processes- perceptions and processes are
logical and coherent.
LOC Abnormalities
GCS – Glasgow Coma Scale
Common terms when assessing
consciousness
Alert – to person, place, and time
Lethargic – drifts off frequently. Must
be aroused. Frequently effect of
sedation
Obtunded – frequent sleep, difficult to
arouse, incoherent speech
Stupor – responds only to vigorous
shaking and pain, groans and
mumbles
Coma – unconscious with little or no
response to stimuli. Little or no reflex
response.
GCS 15 – normal person
GCS <7 – coma
Speech Disorders
Dysphonia – difficulty or discomfort using
voice to talk
Dysarthria – disorder of articulation in
which the speech sounds are distorted.
Aphasia – language defect in
processing
Global aphasia – little or no speech and
comprehension
Broca’s aphasia – can understand
language, but difficulty speaking. Grammar
problems.
Wernicke’s aphasia – problem
comprehending words. Can still articulate
well.
Mood and Affect Abnormalities
Flat affect – no emotional response
Inappropriate affect – wrong emotion for the situation
Depression – sadness
Depersonalization – loss of identity. “I don’t feel real”
Elation – joy and optimism, overconfidence
Euphoria – inappropriate elation
Anxiety – worried, uneasy, nervous
Fear – worried, uneasy, apprehensive
Irritability – annoyed, easily provoked
Rage – furious, loss of control
Lability – rapid shift of emotions
Thought abnormalities
Process Content
Confabulation – make up Phobia – irrational fear of
events an object
Loose associations – Hypochondrias – phobia of
shifting between unrelated having diseases.
ideas Obsession – unwanted and
persistent thoughts
Flight of ideas – unrelated
ideas but connected usually Compulsion – unwanted
and persistent actions.
by a play on words
Delusions – False beliefs,
Word salad – incoherent often of persecution or
mixture of words grandiose
Abnormalities of Perception
Hallucination – Sensory perception for which
there are no external stimuli. May be visual,
auditory, tactile, olfactory, gustatory.
Delusion – Misperception of an actual
existing stimulus, by any sense.
Schizophrenia
Delirium, Dementia, and Amnesia
Delirium
Consciousness change – reduced awareness of environment with
reduced ability to focus, sustain, or shift attention
Cognition change
Develops over a short period of time (hours to days)
Dementia
Memory impairment
One or more of the following:
Aphasia – language disturbance
Apraxia – impaired ability to carry out motor activities despite intact motor
function
Agnosia – impaired ability to recognize or identify objects despite intact
sensory function
Executive functioning disturbance – planning, organizing, sequencing,
abstracting
Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, HIV, cerebrovascular disease
Amnesia
Memory impairment without other disorders
May be caused by trauma or substance induced
Substance Use Disorders
Substance: agents taken nonmedically to alter
mood or behavior
Intoxication – ingestion of substance produces
maladaptive behavior changes due to effects on
CNS
Abuse – Daily use needed to function. Inability to
stop. Impaired social and occupational functioning
Dependence – physiologic dependence on
substance
Tolerance – requires increased amount of
substance to produce same effect
Withdrawal – cessation of substance produces
physiologic symptoms
Effects of Common
Substances
Alcohol, sedatives, and hypnotics (CNS depressants)
Symptoms – unsteady gait, incoordination, impaired judgement
Withdrawal – tremor of hands, eyelids. Tachycardia, elevated BP,
sweating, headache, insomnia, anxiety, N&V, hallucinations,
delusions
Nicotine (mild stimulant)
Symptoms – increased systolic BP, increase HR,
vasoconstriction, loss of appetite, dizziness
Withdrawal – vasodilation, headaches, irritability, anxiety,
nervousness
Marijuana
Symptoms – reddened conjunctivae, tachycardia, dry mouth,
increased appetite, euphoria, anxiety, slowed time perception
Withdrawal – ? restlessness, decreased appetite
Effects of Common
Substances
Cocaine and Amphetamines (psychostimulants)
Symptoms – Pupillary dilation, tachycardia or bradycardia,
elevated or decreased BP, N&V, weight loss, euphoria,
agitation, aggressiveness
Withdrawal – Anxiety, depression, irritability, fatigue
Opiates (morphine, heroin)
Symptoms – pinpoint pupils, decreased BP, pulse,
respirations, and temperature, lethargy, psychomotor
retardation, inattention, impaired memory
Withdrawal – Dilated pupils, lacrimation, tachycardia,
elevated BP, sweating, diarrhea, irritability, depression
Anxiety Disorders
Panic attack
Intense fear or discomfort develops within 10 minutes
Symptoms
Palpitations, sweating, trembling, SOB, feeling of choking, chest pain, nausea,
dizziness
Agoraphobia
Anxiety about being in a place or situation where escape might be difficult
or where help might not be available
Being outside of home, in a crowd, on a bridge, in a car, bus, or train
Specific phobias
Phobias of specific objects provokes an anxiety response
OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive)
PSD (Posttraumatic Stress Disorder)
Experience or witness of actual or threatened death or serious injury of
self or others
Recurrent recollections of event followed by distress
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Persistent general anxiety
Mood Disorders
Depression Mania
5 or more present during Persistently elevated or
the same 2 week period irritable mood lasting 1
Depressed mood week or more with:
Diminished interest Grandiosity
Weight loss Decreased sleep
Insomnia Talkativeness
Psychomotor agitation Flight of ideas
Fatigue Distractibility
Feelings of worthlessness Agitation
Diminished ability to think Pleasurable activities
Thoughts of death