Clinical Predictors of Intracranial Pathology in Emergency Department Patients with Non-traumatic Headache and No Neurological Deficits: Prospective Study
Mustafa Serinken, Cenker Eken, Faruk Güngör, Ömer Akdağ, Veli Citisli

TL;DR
This study identifies clinical signs that help predict intracranial issues in emergency patients with non-traumatic headaches and no neurological symptoms.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on clinical predictors for intracranial pathology in non-traumatic headache patients without neurological deficits.
Findings
Headache worsened by physical activity and age over 50 are strong predictors of intracranial pathology.
Syncope is specifically linked to subarachnoid hemorrhage.
'Sudden onset' and 'worst headache ever' were not significant predictors in this cohort.
Abstract
Non-traumatic headache is a common emergency department (ED) presentation, yet identifying intracranial causes remains challenging in the absence of neurological deficits. In this study we aimed to evaluate the incidence and predictive ability of clinical red flag signs and symptoms for intracranial pathology. We conducted a prospective, multicenter, cross-sectional study across six academic EDs with residency programs in Türkiye. We enrolled consecutive adult patients with non-traumatic headache and no neurological deficits who had cranial computed tomography (CT) at the discretion of the treating attending physician. Exclusion criteria were recent trauma, pregnancy, fever, hematologic conditions, and known intracranial pathology. We recorded clinical features using standardized forms. The primary outcome was the presence of intracranial pathology confirmed by CT or subsequent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigraine and Headache Studies · Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances · Neurosurgical Procedures and Complications
