D
Dalin T. Pulsipher
Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital
Publications - 21
Citations - 852
Dalin T. Pulsipher is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epilepsy & Verbal memory. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 20 publications receiving 769 citations. Previous affiliations of Dalin T. Pulsipher include Brigham Young University & University of Rochester Medical Center.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Thalamofrontal circuitry and executive dysfunction in recent‐onset juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
Dalin T. Pulsipher,Michael Seidenberg,Leslie Guidotti,Victoria N. Tuchscherer,Jared Morton,Raj D. Sheth,Bruce P. Hermann +6 more
TL;DR: This study examined the relationship between thalamic and frontal volumes and executive function in recent‐onset JME compared to healthy control subjects and recent-onset benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (BCECTS), a syndrome not typically associated with thalamocortical or executive dysfunction.
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Association of epilepsy and comorbid conditions
TL;DR: This issue is discussed in the context of five common epilepsy comorbid conditions: bone health and fractures, stroke, depression, migraine and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.
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Cognitive Progression in Epilepsy
TL;DR: This paper reviews recent studies in both the adult and childhood epilepsy literature which have included a longitudinal test–retest design to examine the issue of cognitive progression in people with epilepsy.
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Children with new-onset epilepsy exhibit diffusion abnormalities in cerebral white matter in the absence of volumetric differences.
Elizabeth B. Hutchinson,Dalin T. Pulsipher,Kevin Dabbs,Adan Myers y Gutierrez,Raj D. Sheth,Jana E. Jones,Michael Seidenberg,Elizabeth Meyerand,Bruce P. Hermann +8 more
TL;DR: The results provide the earliest indication of microstructural abnormality in cerebral white matter among children with idiopathic epilepsies and suggests disruption in myelination processes.
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Quality of life and comorbid medical and psychiatric conditions in temporal lobe epilepsy.
TL;DR: The numbers of medical and psychiatric conditions were distinct and significant predictors of QOL satisfaction, and both were stronger correlates than seizure-related factors and demographic variables.