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Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE)

Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE)

Folstein MF, Folstein SE, McHugh PR. J Psychiatr Res. 1975;12(3):189-98.

Patient Information

1. Orientation to Time

/ 5 points

2. Orientation to Place

/ 5 points

3. Registration

Apple, Penny, Table (or similar unrelated objects)

/ 3 points

4. Attention & Calculation

Serial 7s from 100 OR spell "WORLD" backwards

/ 5 points

5. Recall

/ 3 points

6. Naming

/ 2 points

7. Repetition

/ 1 points

8. 3-Stage Command

/ 3 points

9. Reading

/ 1 points

10. Writing

/ 1 points

11. Drawing

/ 1 points

Clinical Notes

Assessment Results

Raw Score:

0/30

Severe Dementia

Profound cognitive impairment. Focus on quality of life, caregiver support, and prevention of complications.

Cognitive Domain Profile

Orientation:0/10
Registration:0/3
Attention:0/5
Recall:0/3
Language:0/4
Visual-Spatial:0/1
Executive Function:0/4

© Folstein MF, Folstein SE, McHugh PR. "Mini-mental state": A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. J Psychiatr Res. 1975;12(3):189-98.

Education adjustment based on Crum RM, et al. Population-based norms for the Mini-Mental State Examination by age and educational level. JAMA. 1993;269(18):2386-91.

Predictive limitation based on Arevalo-Rodriguez I, et al. MMSE for early detection of dementia in people with MCI. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021;7:CD010783.

Guidelines & Evidence

Clinical Details

Section 1

When to Use

Core Utility

The MMSE is a 30-point questionnaire that provides a brief, global measure of cognitive impairment. It is most useful for documenting the severity of known cognitive deficits and tracking changes over time, rather than serving as a standalone diagnostic or predictive tool.

Critical Limitation (Based on Cochrane Review 2021)

This test should NOT be used as a standalone, single-administration test to predict which individuals with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) will progress to dementia. Evidence shows substantial heterogeneity and limited accuracy for this purpose.

Appropriate Use Cases

Serial assessments to document cognitive change over time (e.g., annual re-screenings).
Providing an overall measure of cognitive impairment severity in a patient already diagnosed with dementia.
As part of a comprehensive battery, not in isolation.
Section 2

Formula & Logic

Scoring Breakdown

DomainPointsTask
Orientation10Time (5) and Place (5)
Registration3Repeating 3 unrelated objects
Attention & Calculation5Serial 7s or spelling "WORLD" backwards
Recall3Recalling the 3 objects later
Language & Praxis9Naming (2), Repetition (1), 3-stage command (3), Reading (1), Writing (1), Drawing (1)

Evidence on Predictive Accuracy (for MCI → Dementia)

Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) for the early detection of dementia in people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI)

Arevalo-Rodriguez I et al. • Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2021;

View Source

Summary of Findings from Cochrane Review

Target ConditionMedian SpecificityEstimated SensitivityConsequence per 100 Patients
All-cause Dementia88%40%Misses 22/36 cases, Over-diagnoses 8/64 stable MCI
Alzheimer's Disease Dementia80%54%Misses 18/39 cases, Over-diagnoses 12/61 stable MCI
Section 3

Next Steps

Interpretation with Caution

The following ranges are general guidelines for current cognitive status, NOT for predicting future conversion from MCI to dementia. Avoid using these cutoffs in isolation to determine prognosis.

General Cognitive Status Ranges

24–30: No to Mild Cognitive Impairment
18–23: Mild to Moderate Dementia
0–17: Moderate to Severe Dementia

Evidence-Based Clinical Actions

01
Do NOT rely on a single MMSE score to predict progression from MCI. Refer to the Cochrane review summary in the "Mechanism" tab.
02
Compare with previous scores. A decline of 2-4 points per year in a patient with dementia supports disease progression.
03
Use more sensitive tests for MCI. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) has better sensitivity for detecting milder executive function deficits.
04
Conduct a comprehensive evaluation. This must include a clinical history, informant interview, functional assessment, and evaluation for reversible causes (e.g., B12 deficiency, hypothyroidism).
Section 4

Evidence Appraisal

Primary Systematic Review

Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) for the early detection of dementia in people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI)

Arevalo-Rodriguez I et al. • Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2021;

View Source

Key Conclusions from the Review

The MMSE has insufficient accuracy as a stand-alone test for predicting conversion from MCI to dementia.
Due to high heterogeneity among studies, a single optimal cut-off score could not be recommended.
Future research should focus on serial MMSE measurements or combining the MMSE with other tests, not on single-administration use.

Last Comprehensive Review: 2026

Related Geriatrics Tools

Mini-Mental State Examination
Barthel Index
Morse Fall Scale
Braden Scale
Mini-Cog Dementia Screen
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