Ranch of the Friends Scale
(Ranchos Los Amigos Scale)
Propran-o-LOL (Pharmacology)
The Pokharel Scale
(TBI scales)
H-2-the-IzzO (Complications of TBI)
Wallington? Syndromes
(Stroke Syndromes)
100

non-specific, inconsistent, and non-purposeful reaction to stimuli

What is II, general response 

100
this is the best initial medication for agitation. 

What is propranolol? 

100

Absences of sleep-wake cycles on EEG, eyes closed, no spontaneous purposeful movements, no language comprehension. 

What is a Coma? 

Vegetative State - resumption of sleep/wake cycle. opens eyes but no awareness. Startle but no tracking.

persistent VS > 1 month 

permanent VS >3 months after NTBI >12 months after TBI 

100

A patient will have incontinence, ataxia and AMS with this. 

what is PTH (post-traumatic hydrocephalus)?

100

The loss of the ability to perform simple arithmetic calculations.


Bonus 50: Anosognosia

What is acalulia? typically resulting from disease or injury of the parietal lobe of the brain (dominant side)

Inability to recognize illness in self. Often seen with right parietal lobe lesions or large right hemispheric lesion.

200

Your 30 year old TBI patient is restless, violent toward staff members, and unable to state their name or place. They appear disoriented.

What is IV, confused and agitated

200

GABA agonist which may cause a wakening response in 5% of vegetative or minimally conscious states. 

What is Zolpidem (ambiem) 

200

Axonal Shearing from acceleration-deceleration & rotational forces. 

Bonus 50: structures most damaged with this injury.

What is Diffuse axonal injury?

Bonus: Grey/white matter jxn and corpus callosum. 

200

Clear watery drainage from one side of the nose or one ear which is worse with tilting the head and sitting upright. May be associated with a HA. 

As give the TX. 

What is a CSF leak. TX: lumbar drain or may resolve on its own 

200

Preserved vertical gaze and RAS but otherwise complete paralysis.


Bonus 50: also due to what? 

What is bilateral pontine lesions, Locked in syndrome


Central pontine myelinolysis due to rapid correction of hyponatremia 

300

An 18-year-old female on your inpatient traumatic brain injury service is inconsistently oriented and does not recall your name on a day-to-day basis. She can follow single-step commands. She gets more confused when stressed but can be re-directed and can finish her therapy sessions with encouragement. She is more consistent with goal-directed behavior but needs cueing. Greater participation in activities of daily living is evident and she is developing a better awareness of self and others.

What is VI, confused and appropriate?

300

The CRASH trial indicated this medication is contraindicated in head injuries

What is steroids? 

300

The classification of Post-traumatic seizures and when you use AEDs. 

immediate : 1st 24hrs

Early: 1st 24hrs to 1 week (need AEDs for 1 year)

late: > 1 week (need AEDs for 2 years or greater)

no benefit beyond one week of AEDs for PPX. 

300

Mature lamellar bone formation in extra skeletal soft tissues

Bonus: the most common place for this in TBI patients and the modality for detection 

What is Heterotopic Ossification?

Bonus: Hip or knee, triple phase bone scan (2-4 weeks)

300

The symptoms of unilateral ACA syndrome.

What is Contralateral weakness (leg>arm) and hemiasthesia (ant limb IC) sparing face, head/eye deviation to side of lesion, urinary incontinence, pathologic grasp phenomena

400

You are consulted on a 58 yo gentleman after MVA and his is not oriented to self or situation. he can not give you details or his injury and upon further questioning he become angry and starts pulling at his IV lines. 

You see them 2 days later and they are still not oriented but they are able to sit through your exam though they do not follow your commands. There rancho now is...

What is V confused, inappropriate.  

400

Amantadine MOA and its use. 

What is a NMDA antagonist and indirect dopamine agonist which helps to improve arousal and alertness.

400

The end of post-traumatic amnesia.  

What is 2 successive days with a GOAT (GAlveston orientation and amnesia test) greater or equal to 75? 


longer the duration of PTA the worse the outcome...

400

The symptoms of PAID (paroxysmal autonomic instability dystonia) and the cause. 

What is agitation, hypertension, tachycardia, hyperthermia, tachypnea, spasticity, perspiration due to surge of circulating catecholamines

400

Millard-Gubler Syndrome

What is a Lesion in Base of the Pons (obstruction of the circumferential branches of the basilar artery causing Ipsilateral Abducens CN6 (diplopia, internal strabismus, and loss of power to rotate the affected eye outward) and facial palsy (CN7) AND Contralateral Hemiplegia, analgesia, hypoesthesia

500

write out the rancho los amigos scale 

1: no response

2: general response

3: localized response 

4: confused, agitated

5: confused, inappropriate

6: confused, appropriate

7:  automatic and appropriate

8 purposeful, appropriate



500

A life-threatening, idiosyncratic reaction to  medications that is characterized by fever, muscular rigidity, altered mental status, and autonomic dysfunction

Bonus: the treatment.

What is Neuroleptic Malignant syndrome? typically due to atypicals.  

Bonus: treatment with Dantrolene and BBs

500

A 22 year old male was involved in a motor vehicle collision. He initially required cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and was brought to the hospital's emergency department by EMS. At time of your evaluation, the patient transiently opened his eyes when you loudly voiced simple commands. He consistently verbalized words, but they were inappropriate to the situation. Part of your exam included stimulation of his arm with a sharp pin, to which he withdrew consistently. GCS =...

What is 10, moderate TBI. Opening eyes to loud voice (3), inappropriate words verbalized (3), withdrawing limb from painful stimulus (4)


eye: 4 spontaneous, 3 verbal, 2, pain, 1 none

Verbal: 5 oriented, 4 confused, 3 inappropriate, 2 incoherent, 1 none

motor 6: obeys commands, 5 localizes to pain, 4 withdraws to pain, 3 flexion/decorticate, 2 extension/decerebrate, 1 none

500

Risk factors for late PTS (100 pt for each up to 500pts). 

What is Bilateral parietal contusions, penetrating head injury, intracranial hematoma, early PTS, depressed skull fx, prolonged coma, PTA > 24hrs 

500

Anterior limb of internal capsule. (name of syndrome associated)

What is Clumsy hand dysarthria