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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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Screening for depression in systemic lupus erythematosus with the British Columbia Major Depression Inventory.

TL;DR: Self-reported symptoms in patients with SLE and community control subjects were examined with the British Columbia Major Depression Inventory and the Beck Depression Inventory–II and a subset of patients with depression, according to the Beck inventory, were selected.
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Usefulness of Video Review of Possible Concussions in National Youth Rugby League.

TL;DR: Video review appears to be a useful adjunct for identifying players suffering possible concussion, and further research is required on the usefulness of video review for identifying signs of concussive injury.
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The persistent belief that VIQ-PIQ splits suggest lateralized brain damage.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the VIQ-PIQ split has no diagnostic predictive validity in persons with left hemisphere lesions (who are not aphasic) and the VIZ-PIZ split has very limited diagnostic predictivevalid in people with right hemisphere lesions.
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To exclude or not to exclude: white matter hyperintensities in diffusion tensor imaging research.

TL;DR: The decision to include or exclude subjects who have incidental findings can influence the results of a study, and this study was to compare healthy control subjects with or without WMHIs on whole brain DTI.
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Using concurrent gait and cognitive assessments to identify impairments after concussion: a narrative review.

TL;DR: It is described how combined gait and cognitive (i.e., dual task) tests, as well as single-taskgait and computerized neurocognitive examinations can assist clinical decision-making.