Neurological Assessment Tool

GCS Calculator

Adult & Pediatric Glasgow Coma Scale (with Intubated T Modifier)

Patient Assessment

GCS Total
Breakdown
Severity

GCS Severity Classification

13–15
Mild TBI
Low neurosurgical risk. CT if deteriorates or high-risk mechanism.
9–12
Moderate TBI
Urgent CT head. Neurosurgical consult. Close monitoring.
3–8
Severe TBI / Coma
Airway protection required. ICU admission. Urgent neurosurgery.

GCS Component Scoring Reference

ScoreEye Opening (E)Verbal — Adult (V)Verbal — Pediatric (V)Motor Response (M)
6Obeys commands / Normal movement
5OrientedNormal (coos, babbles)Localizes to pain / Withdraws to touch
4SpontaneousConfusedConsolable cryNormal flexion / Withdraws to pain
3To speechInappropriate wordsPersistent cry / Pain cryAbnormal flexion (Decorticate)
2To painSounds onlyMoans / GruntsExtension (Decerebrate)
1NoneNoneNoneNone
TIntubatedIntubated

About the Glasgow Coma Scale

The Glasgow Coma Scale was introduced by Graham Teasdale and Bryan Jennett in 1974 at the University of Glasgow as a standardized method to objectively assess and communicate the conscious state of a patient following brain injury. Prior to GCS, neurological assessment was inconsistent and highly variable between clinicians and institutions. Today, GCS is the most universally used consciousness assessment tool in emergency medicine, trauma surgery, critical care, and neurology worldwide.

The scale evaluates three independent domains: eye opening, verbal response, and motor response. The maximum score of 15 indicates a fully alert, oriented individual. The minimum score of 3 (not zero) reflects the lowest possible response in each domain. A score of ≤8 is the internationally accepted criterion for coma and is a standard intubation threshold in head-injured patients.

Intubated Patients and the "T" Modifier

When a patient is intubated or tracheostomized, the verbal response cannot be accurately assessed. In such cases, the verbal component is recorded as "T" (for Tube), and the GCS is expressed as, for example, E3VTM5. The numeric sum only includes the Eye and Motor scores. This convention prevents underestimation of consciousness due to the mechanical inability to speak and ensures documentation clarity across the care team.

Pediatric (Adelaide) Scale

Infants and young children cannot produce adult-standard verbal responses due to developmental stage. The Adelaide Pediatric GCS adapts the verbal criteria to age-appropriate behaviours: a score of 5 represents normal cooing, babbling, or smiling; lower scores indicate crying in response to pain, moaning, or complete absence of response. Motor and eye components follow the same principles as the adult scale but with age-adapted descriptions for motor behaviour.

Important Limitations

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum GCS score?

The minimum GCS score is 3, not 0. This is because each of the three components (Eye, Verbal, Motor) has a minimum score of 1. A score of 3 (E1V1M1) represents the deepest state of unresponsiveness measurable by the scale.

What GCS score is considered a medical emergency?

A GCS of 8 or below is considered a medical emergency requiring immediate airway assessment and management. Most trauma protocols mandate intubation for GCS ≤8. Any patient whose GCS is falling — even from a higher baseline — requires urgent reassessment and escalation.

How is GCS different in pediatric patients?

The pediatric adaptation modifies the verbal criteria to reflect age-appropriate communication. An infant who is cooing and smiling normally scores 5 on verbal, just as an oriented adult does. Infants cannot say "I am oriented to time, place, and person" but their developmental equivalent of a best response is still coded as a 5.

Is GCS used for stroke patients?

GCS can be applied in stroke patients to assess consciousness level, but the NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) is preferred for detailed stroke-specific deficit assessment. The NIHSS captures language, motor, and sensory deficits with greater specificity for stroke care pathways.