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Gerald D. Silverberg

Researcher at Brown University

Publications -  103
Citations -  6356

Gerald D. Silverberg is an academic researcher from Brown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Choroid plexus & Hydrocephalus. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 103 publications receiving 5859 citations. Previous affiliations of Gerald D. Silverberg include Stanford University & Rhode Island Hospital.

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Multiplicity of cerebrospinal fluid functions: New challenges in health and disease

TL;DR: This review integrates eight aspects of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulatory dynamics: formation rate, pressure, flow, volume, turnover rate, composition, recycling and reabsorption.
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RAGE, LRP-1, and amyloid-beta protein in Alzheimer’s disease

TL;DR: The data confirm that AD is associated with changes in the relative distribution of RAGE and LRP-1 receptors in human hippocampus and suggest that the proportion of amyloid within the brains of AD patients that is derived from the systemic circulation may be significant.
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Alzheimer's disease, normal-pressure hydrocephalus, and senescent changes in CSF circulatory physiology: a hypothesis

TL;DR: A new nosological entity of CSF circulatory failure is postulate, with features of AD and NPH, that may cover an important subset of patients who carry the diagnosis of either AD or NPH.
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Stereotactic heavy-charged-particle Bragg-peak radiation for intracranial arteriovenous malformations.

TL;DR: It is concluded that heavy-charged-particle radiation is an effective therapy for symptomatic, surgically inaccessible intracranial arteriovenous malformations and a prolonged latency period before complete obliteration of the vascular lesion and a small risk of serious neurologic complications.
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Memory encoding in Alzheimer's disease: an fMRI study of explicit and implicit memory.

TL;DR: Functional MRI findings indicate a dissociation in Alzheimer's disease between impaired explicit memory encoding in MTL and fusiform regions and intact implicit encoding in earlier-stage occipital cortex.