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AIMS: Escala d'Alteracions Involuntàries Anormals×Escala de classificació de Hunt i Hess×NIHSS: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale×
CampNeurologiaNeurologiaNeurologia
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Any d'origen197619681989
Autor originalNational Institute of Mental HealthWilliam E. Hunt and Robert M. HessThomas Brott and NIH Stroke Study Group
TipusClinician-rated observationClinician-ratedClinician-rated
Font seminalNational Institute of Mental Health (1976). Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS). In: Rockland, L. H., Schooler, N. R., & Levine, J. (Eds.), Drug Treatment of Mental Disorders. New York: Raven Press. link ↗Hunt, W. E., Hess, R. M. (1968). Surgical risk as related to time of intervention in the repair of intracranial aneurysms. Journal of Neurosurgery, 28(1), 14-20. DOI ↗Brott, T., Adams, H. P., Olinger, C. P., et al. (1989). Measurements of acute cerebral infarction: A clinical examination scale. Stroke, 20(7), 864-870. DOI ↗
ÀliesAIMSHunt-Hess GradeNIH Stroke Scale
Relacionats345
ResumThe Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) is the standard clinical rating scale for assessing tardive dyskinesia, a iatrogenic movement disorder resulting from chronic antipsychotic medication exposure. Developed by the National Institute of Mental Health in 1976, the 12-item scale systematically measures involuntary movements across facial, oral, limb, and trunk regions. The AIMS is mandatory screening tool for patients on long-term antipsychotic therapy and essential for monitoring antipsychotic-associated movement complications.The Hunt and Hess Scale is the most widely used clinical grading system for assessing severity and prognosis in subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) caused by ruptured intracranial aneurysm. Developed by neurosurgeons William Hunt and Robert Hess in 1968, the five-point ordinal scale measures level of consciousness and presence of focal neurological deficits. Hunt-Hess grade at admission is the single strongest predictor of 30-day mortality and functional outcome and guides urgency of neurosurgical intervention.The NIHSS is the standard acute stroke severity assessment tool used in emergency departments, stroke centers, and clinical trials worldwide. Developed by the NIH Stroke Study Group in 1989, the 15-item scale provides rapid, reproducible quantification of acute neurological deficit from ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke. NIHSS scores inform thrombolytic and thrombectomy eligibility, predict outcomes, and serve as primary endpoint in stroke intervention trials.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: AIMS · Hunt and Hess Scale · NIHSS. Recuperat el 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare