I realize that in order to visualize intracranial masses a CT with contrast is the imaging modality of choice.
No. Currently, the imaging modality of choice for detecting an intracranial mass is an MRI protocol that includes triple-dose gadolinium (not FDA approved) with magnetization transfer in three planes+high resolution FLAIR+diffusion, preferably on a 3T magnet.
Regular contrast MRI, noncontrast MRI, contrast CT, and noncontrast CT are other ways to look for masses, in decreasing order of overall sensitivity.
My question is... will most masses still show up on a non-contrast CT (or will there be some secondary changes which may indicate a mass)?
Both.
What percent of masses, or what size masses will be missed on a non-contrast CT as opposed to a contrast CT?
No good answer here. It depends on a combination of size, relative density of tumor, exact location within the brain or surrounding structures (some places are harder and some places easier to visualize), and the amount of surrounding edema, mass effect, etc.
As I said above... I wasn't worried about a brain tumor. Nevertheless, it should be considered in the differential of a patient with a persistent HA lasting over over 4 weeks. Other more serious etiologies need to be ruled out (SAH, SDH, EDH, Meningitis, pseudotumor cerebrei).
EDH is not in the differential of HA of 4 weeks. SAH would also be quite rare to have this presentation.
My question was how good is a non-contrast CT at visualizing tumors? Are most picked up? Do they have to be very large?
Pretty good, but one can always make the argument that it's not good enough. Yes, most are picked up, except for small lesion, those with minimal edema, posterior fossa lesions, cortical lesions.
Some neuroradiologists, neurologists, and neurosurgeons even believe that outside of the ED, if you're thinking of brain mass, you do an MRI and not a CT, even at the start. Most of the head CTs (contrast or no contrast) we get outside of emergent situations are from primary care doctors. Neurologists and neurosurgeons just go straight to MRI.