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Grant L. Iverson

Researcher at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

Publications -  563
Citations -  38605

Grant L. Iverson is an academic researcher from Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Concussion & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 85, co-authored 499 publications receiving 33622 citations. Previous affiliations of Grant L. Iverson include GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre & Simon Fraser University.

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Contributions of neuroimaging, balance testing, electrophysiology and blood markers to the assessment of sport-related concussion

TL;DR: There is accumulating research, however, that shows promise for the future clinical application of functional magnetic resonance imaging in sport concussion assessment and management.
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The potential for animal models to provide insight into mild traumatic brain injury: Translational challenges and strategies.

TL;DR: Current issues facing themTBI field are introduced, the available research methodologies and previous studies in mTBI animal models are summarized, and how a translational research approach may be useful in advancing the understanding and management of m TBI is discussed.
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Identifying a cognitive impairment subgroup in adults with mood disorders.

TL;DR: Cognitive impairment associated with mood disorders is limited to a minority of patients with the majority being broadly cognitively normal, suggesting that cognitive screening tools of this type might be useful in selecting participants for studies.
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Prevalence of abnormal CT-scans following mild head injury.

TL;DR: There was a tremendous overlap in injury characteristics between patients with complicated and uncomplicated mild head injuries, and there were modest, yet statistically significant, relationships between the presence of intracranial abnormalities and lower GCS scores, greater frequency of positive loss of consciousness, more frequency of skull fractures, and lower GOAT scores.
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Post-concussion Symptom Reporting and the “Good-Old-Days” Bias Following Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

TL;DR: Patients with MTBI appear to misperceive their preinjury functioning as better than the average person and report more post-injury symptoms, consistent with the "good-old-days" bias.