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Headaches: when is it serious? Red flags a neurosurgeon looks for

2026-06-22 · 5 min read · Dr. Akşan team

The overwhelming majority of headaches are benign. A calm guide to the small set of warning signs that justify urgent imaging.

First, the reassuring truth: the overwhelming majority of headaches — tension headaches, migraines — are painful but benign, and are managed by neurologists and family doctors, not surgeons. Neurosurgeons care about a small set of warning signs, the "red flags".

The red flags

  • Thunderclap onset — a headache that reaches maximum intensity within seconds to a minute, often described as "the worst headache of my life". This needs emergency evaluation.
  • A clearly new type of headache after age 50, or a marked change in a long-standing pattern
  • Headache with neurological symptoms — weakness on one side, speech difficulty, double vision, new clumsiness
  • Headache with fever and neck stiffness
  • Morning headaches with nausea or vomiting, especially if progressively worsening over weeks
  • Headache after a head injury, particularly with drowsiness or confusion
  • New headache in a person with cancer or a weakened immune system

Why these matter

Each of these patterns can point to causes that imaging can identify — bleeding, raised pressure, infection or a mass. Most people with a red flag will still turn out to have a benign explanation, but this is the group where a scan is clearly justified.

What to do

For a thunderclap headache or headache with acute neurological signs: emergency care, immediately. For the slower red flags: see a doctor promptly and ask whether imaging is appropriate.

And for everyone else

If your headaches are long-standing, familiar in pattern and free of the signs above, that is genuinely reassuring — and a neurologist, not a surgeon, is the right specialist to help you manage them.


This article is general information, not medical advice. Every case is different — please discuss your own situation with a qualified specialist.

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Headaches: when is it serious? Red flags a neurosurgeon looks for