J
Jason H. Huang
Researcher at Scott & White Hospital
Publications - 220
Citations - 4685
Jason H. Huang is an academic researcher from Scott & White Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Traumatic brain injury. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 184 publications receiving 3488 citations. Previous affiliations of Jason H. Huang include Baylor University & University of Pennsylvania.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Thoracic outlet syndrome
Jason H. Huang,Eric L. Zager +1 more
TL;DR: Thoracic outlet syndrome is perhaps the most difficult entrapment neuropathy encountered by neurosurgeons and for some patients with the common or nonspecific type of TOS in whom nonoperative therapies fail.
Journal ArticleDOI
Traumatic Brain Injury pathophysiology and treatments: early, intermediate, and late phases post-injury.
Hanna Algattas,Jason H. Huang +1 more
TL;DR: The mechanisms of the pathological hallmarks of TBI are discussed and both current and novel treatments which target the respective pathways are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI
The spectrum of neurobehavioral sequelae after repetitive mild traumatic brain injury: a novel mouse model of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
Anthony L. Petraglia,Benjamin A. Plog,Samantha Dayawansa,Michael Chen,Matthew L. Dashnaw,Katarzyna Czerniecka,Corey T. Walker,Tyler Viterise,Ollivier Hyrien,Jeffrey J. Iliff,Rashid Deane,Jason H. Huang +11 more
TL;DR: The neurological sequelae of repetitive mild traumatic brain injury is described in a novel mouse model, which resemble several of the neuropsychiatric behaviors observed clinically in patients sustaining repetitive mild head injury.
Journal ArticleDOI
The pathophysiology underlying repetitive mild traumatic brain injury in a novel mouse model of chronic traumatic encephalopathy
Anthony L. Petraglia,Benjamin A. Plog,Samantha Dayawansa,Matthew L. Dashnaw,Katarzyna Czerniecka,Corey T. Walker,Michael Chen,Ollivier Hyrien,Jeffrey J. Iliff,Rashid Deane,Jason H. Huang +10 more
TL;DR: The neuropathological findings in this new model of repetitive mTBI resemble some of the histopathological hallmarks of CTE, including increased astrogliosis, microglial activation, and hyperphosphorylated tau protein accumulation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Eye tracking detects disconjugate eye movements associated with structural traumatic brain injury and concussion.
Uzma Samadani,Robert Ritlop,Marleen Reyes,Elena Nehrbass,Meng Li,Elizabeth Lamm,Julia R Schneider,David Shimunov,Maria Sava,Radek Kolecki,Paige Burris,Lindsey Altomare,Talha Mehmood,Theodore Smith,Jason H. Huang,Christopher McStay,S. Rob Todd,Meng Qian,Douglas Kondziolka,Stephen P. Wall,Paul P. Huang +20 more
TL;DR: An algorithm for eye tracking in which the Cartesian coordinates of the right and left pupils are tracked over 200 sec and compared to each other as a subject watches a short film clip moving inside an aperture on a computer screen helps quantify the severity of ocular motility disruption associated with concussion and structural brain injury.