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Brian D. Greenwald
Researcher at Rutgers University
Publications - 40
Citations - 1480
Brian D. Greenwald is an academic researcher from Rutgers University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rehabilitation & Traumatic brain injury. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 36 publications receiving 1249 citations. Previous affiliations of Brian D. Greenwald include Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Longitudinal outcome of patients with disordered consciousness in the NIDRR TBI Model Systems Programs.
Risa Nakase-Richardson,Risa Nakase-Richardson,John Whyte,Joseph T. Giacino,Shital Pavawalla,Scott D. Barnett,Stuart A. Yablon,Mark Sherer,Kathleen Kalmar,Flora M. Hammond,Brian D. Greenwald,Lawrence J. Horn,Ronald T. Seel,Marissa McCarthy,Johanna Tran,William C. Walker +15 more
TL;DR: People with DOC at the time of admission to inpatient rehabilitation showed functional improvement throughout early recovery and in years post-injury.
Journal Article
Congenital and acquired brain injury. 1. Brain injury: Epidemiology and pathophysiology
TL;DR: Brain injury epidemiology is summarized, and differences in between brain injury in pediatric and elderly persons are highlighted, and classification of brain injury severity provides a way to stratify this heterogeneous group.
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A randomized controlled trial of sertraline for the treatment of depression in persons with traumatic brain injury.
Teresa Ashman,Joshua Cantor,Wayne A. Gordon,Lisa Spielman,Steve Flanagan,Annika Ginsberg,Clara Engmann,Matthew Egan,Felicia Ambrose,Brian D. Greenwald +9 more
TL;DR: Both groups showed improvements in mood, anxiety, and QOL, with 59% of the experimental group and 32% ofThe placebo group responding to the treatment, defined as a reduction of a person's HAM-D score by 50%.
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Functional Outcomes in Traumatic Disorders of Consciousness: 5-Year Outcomes From the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems
John Whyte,Risa Nakase-Richardson,Flora M. Hammond,Shane McNamee,Joseph T. Giacino,Kathleen Kalmar,Brian D. Greenwald,Stuart A. Yablon,Stuart A. Yablon,Lawrence J. Horn +9 more
TL;DR: Substantial proportions of patients admitted to acute inpatient rehabilitation before following commands recover independent functioning over as long as 5 years, particularly if they begin to follow commands before hospital discharge.
Journal ArticleDOI
Visual impairments in the first year after traumatic brain injury
TL;DR: It is important to screen persons who have suffered traumatic brain injury for sensorimotor vision deficits early on in recovery so that these issues may be addressed and recovery of function and independence in the community are not delayed.