2023
DOI: 10.1016/j.ensci.2023.100473
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Secondary headaches - red and green flags and their significance for diagnostics

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Su topo grafía está mayormente asociada a tumores de fosa posterior y de rápido crecimiento. Para el diagnósti co diferencial con u otras cefaleas deberá tenerse en cuenta la presencia de otros signos neu rológicos focales, como convulsiones o trastornos neuropsicológicos [14].…”
Section: Patología Intracranealunclassified
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“…Su topo grafía está mayormente asociada a tumores de fosa posterior y de rápido crecimiento. Para el diagnósti co diferencial con u otras cefaleas deberá tenerse en cuenta la presencia de otros signos neu rológicos focales, como convulsiones o trastornos neuropsicológicos [14].…”
Section: Patología Intracranealunclassified
“…La literatura menciona que del 6 al 44% de los ca sos de Ataque Isquémico Transitorio o de Ictus is quémico pueden asociarse a cefalea aguda. Algunos de los factores de riesgo incluyen sexo fe menino, antecedentes de cefaleas previas, lesiones mesencefálicas parenquimatosas o de circulación posterior [14]. El manejo de las cefaleas crónicas post ictiales deberá ser multidisciplinario, una vez que cursan con fatiga, depresión, ansiedad y co morbilidades.…”
Section: Enfermedad Cerebro Vascularunclassified
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“…Tension-type headache (TTH) and migraine are the most common primary headaches, accounting for almost 80% of all headache disorders. The remaining 20% are classified as secondary headaches due to an underlying medical condition, mostly with infectious, inflammatory, vascular, traumatic or structural causes [ 1 ]. According to the latest estimates of the Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD) in 2019, primary headache disorders, including TTH, migraine, trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias and cluster headaches, frequently occur and account for 8% of the total years lived with a disability, corresponding to about 800 million incident cases and 2.6 billion prevalent cases [ 2 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because presence or absence of a visual aura and the underlying pathophysiology can be highly dependent on the non-migraine headache subtype, it is important to know how many of the non-migraine headache sufferers have infectious, inflammatory, vascular, traumatic, neoplastic, or structural causes. 2 …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%