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Apex Nursing

Reference — Neonatal

APGAR Scoring Reference

APGAR is the standardized snapshot of newborn transition at one and five minutes — five components, each scored 0 to 2. It guides ongoing assessment; resuscitation never waits for it.

Data Source: Virginia Apgar (1953) / AAP-AHA Neonatal Resuscitation Guidelines

Educational use only. Resuscitation decisions follow NRP and provider direction in real time — the APGAR score documents transition, it does not gate intervention. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Five Components (A-P-G-A-R)

Component0 Points1 Point2 Points
Appearance (color)Blue or pale all overBody pink, extremities blue (acrocyanosis)Completely pink
Pulse (heart rate)AbsentBelow 100 bpm100 bpm or above
Grimace (reflex irritability)No response to stimulationGrimace with stimulationCry, cough, or sneeze with stimulation
Activity (muscle tone)Limp, flaccidSome flexion of extremitiesActive motion, well flexed
Respiration (effort)AbsentSlow, irregular, weak cryStrong, vigorous cry

Interpretation and Timing

ScoreMeaningTypical Action
7–10Reassuring — normal transitionRoutine care: dry, warm, skin-to-skin, ongoing observation
4–6Moderately depressedStimulate, clear airway per NRP, support breathing, rescore
0–3Severely depressedActive resuscitation per NRP underway; team mobilized

Scored at 1 and 5 minutes; if the 5-minute score is below 7, repeat every 5 minutes up to 20 minutes.

Clinical Notes

Acrocyanosis is expected

Blue hands and feet with a pink body in the first hours is normal transition — it scores 1 on Appearance but does not itself signal distress. Central cyanosis (trunk, lips, mucosa) does.

Heart rate dominates

Pulse is the most important single component — a newborn heart rate under 100 drives NRP action regardless of the composite score.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Memory aid: APGAR = Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, Respiration.
  • Resuscitation starts when needed — never delayed to compute a score.
  • A 5-minute score below 7 means rescoring every 5 minutes to 20 minutes.
  • Acrocyanosis scores 1 for color and is normal early; central cyanosis is never normal.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) · Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) · AWHONN. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →