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Diego Morita

Researcher at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Publications -  18
Citations -  570

Diego Morita is an academic researcher from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epilepsy & Ictal. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 16 publications receiving 490 citations. Previous affiliations of Diego Morita include University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Quality improvement in neurology

TL;DR: It is estimated that the annual direct medical cost of epilepsy in the United States is $9.6 billion, and this estimate does not include indirect costs from losses in quality of life or productivity.
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Even a single seizure negatively impacts pediatric health-related quality of life.

TL;DR: The primary objectives of this study were to compare parent–proxy HRQOL in children with a single seizure and newly diagnosed untreated epilepsy to normative data and to examine differences in parent– proxyHRQOL between children with single seizure.
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Ictal MEG onset source localization compared to intracranial EEG and outcome: improved epilepsy presurgical evaluation in pediatrics.

TL;DR: Although the capture of seizures during MEG recording is challenging, the source localization for ictal MEG onset proved to be a useful tool for presurgical evaluation in the pediatric population with medically intractable epilepsy.
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Development and validation of the Pediatric Epilepsy Side Effects Questionnaire

TL;DR: The Pediatric Epilepsy Side Effects Questionnaire is a reliable and valid measure of AED side effects in children across the epilepsy spectrum that can be used in both clinical and research settings.
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One-month adherence in children with new-onset epilepsy: white-coat compliance does not occur

TL;DR: Poor adherence seen for children with new-onset epilepsy during the first month of antiepileptic drug therapy is a cause for concern and additional studies are needed to document whether this trend continues longitudinally and determine the clinical impact of poor adherence.