🔥 Free CCRN prep — 695+ questions & AI tutor → Start Free
12% of CCRN Exam

Neurology System Study Guide

Stroke (ischemic vs hemorrhagic), increased ICP, status epilepticus, TBI, and brain death assessment. Cushing’s triad, GCS, and herniation are common test points.

Contents

  1. Neurological Assessment
  2. Stroke Management
  3. Increased Intracranial Pressure
  4. Seizures & Status Epilepticus
  5. Traumatic Brain Injury
  6. Brain Death Assessment

Neurological Assessment

Level of Consciousness

Pupil Assessment

Motor Assessment

Cranial Nerve Assessment

Stroke Management

Ischemic vs Hemorrhagic Stroke

NIHSS Scoring

Ischemic Stroke Treatment

tPA Contraindications

Hemorrhagic Stroke Management

Increased Intracranial Pressure

ICP Fundamentals

Signs of Increased ICP

ICP Management Strategies

Medical Treatment of Elevated ICP

Brain Herniation Syndromes

Test your neurology knowledge so farTake 10 CCRN-style questions on what you just read — with full rationales.
Practice Now →

Seizures & Status Epilepticus

Seizure Types

Status Epilepticus

Status Epilepticus Treatment

Post-Seizure Care

Traumatic Brain Injury

TBI Classification

Types of Intracranial Hemorrhage

TBI Management Goals

Nursing Considerations

Brain Death Assessment

Brain Death Definition

Clinical Examination Criteria

Apnea Test

Confirmatory Testing

Nursing Considerations

See a Neurology question you can’t answer?

Here are 3 questions from our premium bank. The full rationale explains exactly why the right answer is right — and why the 3 distractors trap most test-takers.

Premium Practice Question

A patient has had continuous generalized tonic-clonic seizure activity for 6 minutes. SpO₂ is falling despite nonrebreather. Which intervention is most important first?

  1. Load levetiracetam
  2. Administer benzodiazepine and support airway/oxygenation
  3. Start hypertonic saline
  4. Restrict fluids
Rationale: Seizure >5 minutes = status epilepticus → benzodiazepines first, and simultaneous airway/oxygenation support....
Unlock full rationale + 692 more questions
Premium Practice Question

A subarachnoid hemorrhage patient becomes increasingly confused. Labs: Na 118, serum osmolality 262, urine osmolality 650, urine Na 55, UOP 15 mL/hr, urine specific gravity 1.030. Most likely diagnosis?

  1. Central diabetes insipidus
  2. SIADH
  3. Osmotic diuresis
  4. Prerenal azotemia
Rationale: Low Na + low serum osmolality + concentrated urine + low UOP + high urine Na/osm = SIADH....
Unlock full rationale + 692 more questions
Premium Practice Question

A severe TBI patient has abrupt UOP 900 mL/hr, urine specific gravity 1.002, Na 157, serum osmolality 312, HR 128, BP 92/54. Which action is most appropriate?

  1. Fluid restriction and demeclocycline
  2. Replace free water/volume and consider DDAVP for central DI
  3. Hypertonic saline bolus
  4. Continue diuresis to lower ICP
Rationale: This is DI physiology with hypovolemia and hypernatremia. Priority is restore volume/free water, then DDAVP if central DI....
Unlock full rationale + 692 more questions

Practice Neurology Questions

Test your neurology knowledge with CCRN-style practice questions and detailed rationales.

Take Neurology Quiz →