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Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings

The aim of this study was to measure prevalence, to describe underlying etiologies, and to assess radiological findings, focusing on significant intracranial abnormality (sICA). This was a prospective study of unselected adult patients admitted to the emergency department (ED) in a tertiary care hos...

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Autores principales: Handschin, Nadja, Oppliger, Maria, Brehm, Alex, Psychogios, Marios, Bonati, Leo, Nickel, Christian H., Bingisser, Roland
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32806717
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082621
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author Handschin, Nadja
Oppliger, Maria
Brehm, Alex
Psychogios, Marios
Bonati, Leo
Nickel, Christian H.
Bingisser, Roland
author_facet Handschin, Nadja
Oppliger, Maria
Brehm, Alex
Psychogios, Marios
Bonati, Leo
Nickel, Christian H.
Bingisser, Roland
author_sort Handschin, Nadja
collection PubMed
description The aim of this study was to measure prevalence, to describe underlying etiologies, and to assess radiological findings, focusing on significant intracranial abnormality (sICA). This was a prospective study of unselected adult patients admitted to the emergency department (ED) in a tertiary care hospital where all presenters were systematically interviewed about their symptoms. We attributed nontraumatic headache with neuroimaging to four groups: Normal or no new finding, extracranial abnormality, insignificant intracranial abnormality, or significant intracranial abnormality. sICA was defined as “needing acute therapy”, “needing follow-up neuroimaging”, or “clinically important neurological disorder”. Among 11,269 screened ED presentations, the prevalence of nontraumatic headache was 10.1% (1132 patients). Neuroimaging (cCT and/or cMRI) was performed in 303 patients. Seventy (23.1% of scanned; 6.2% of all headache patients) patients had sICA. Etiologies were cerebrovascular disease (56%), intracranial bleeding (17%), tumors (14%), infection (9%), and others (6%). Short-term outcome was excellent, with 99.3% in-hospital survival in patients with and 99.4% in patients without neuroimaging, and 97.1% in sICA; 1-year survival in outpatients with neuroimaging was 99.2%, 99.0% in outpatients without, and 88.6% in patients with sICA. Factors associated with sICA were age, emergency severity index (ESI) of 1 or 2, Glasgow coma score (GCS) under 14, focal neurological signs, and a history of malignancy. Prevalence of headache and incidence of sICA were high, but survival after work-up for nontraumatic headache was excellent in the 94% patients without sICA. Due to the incidence of sICA, extensive indication for neuroimaging in headache patients is further warranted, particularly in patients with risk factors.
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spelling pubmed-74649802020-09-04 Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings Handschin, Nadja Oppliger, Maria Brehm, Alex Psychogios, Marios Bonati, Leo Nickel, Christian H. Bingisser, Roland J Clin Med Article The aim of this study was to measure prevalence, to describe underlying etiologies, and to assess radiological findings, focusing on significant intracranial abnormality (sICA). This was a prospective study of unselected adult patients admitted to the emergency department (ED) in a tertiary care hospital where all presenters were systematically interviewed about their symptoms. We attributed nontraumatic headache with neuroimaging to four groups: Normal or no new finding, extracranial abnormality, insignificant intracranial abnormality, or significant intracranial abnormality. sICA was defined as “needing acute therapy”, “needing follow-up neuroimaging”, or “clinically important neurological disorder”. Among 11,269 screened ED presentations, the prevalence of nontraumatic headache was 10.1% (1132 patients). Neuroimaging (cCT and/or cMRI) was performed in 303 patients. Seventy (23.1% of scanned; 6.2% of all headache patients) patients had sICA. Etiologies were cerebrovascular disease (56%), intracranial bleeding (17%), tumors (14%), infection (9%), and others (6%). Short-term outcome was excellent, with 99.3% in-hospital survival in patients with and 99.4% in patients without neuroimaging, and 97.1% in sICA; 1-year survival in outpatients with neuroimaging was 99.2%, 99.0% in outpatients without, and 88.6% in patients with sICA. Factors associated with sICA were age, emergency severity index (ESI) of 1 or 2, Glasgow coma score (GCS) under 14, focal neurological signs, and a history of malignancy. Prevalence of headache and incidence of sICA were high, but survival after work-up for nontraumatic headache was excellent in the 94% patients without sICA. Due to the incidence of sICA, extensive indication for neuroimaging in headache patients is further warranted, particularly in patients with risk factors. MDPI 2020-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7464980/ /pubmed/32806717 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082621 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Handschin, Nadja
Oppliger, Maria
Brehm, Alex
Psychogios, Marios
Bonati, Leo
Nickel, Christian H.
Bingisser, Roland
Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings
title Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings
title_full Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings
title_fullStr Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings
title_full_unstemmed Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings
title_short Nontraumatic Headache in Adult Emergency Patients: Prevalence, Etiologies, and Radiological Findings
title_sort nontraumatic headache in adult emergency patients: prevalence, etiologies, and radiological findings
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32806717
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082621
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