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Lisa Grilli

Researcher at Montreal Children's Hospital

Publications -  18
Citations -  571

Lisa Grilli is an academic researcher from Montreal Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rehabilitation & Concussion. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 14 publications receiving 496 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa Grilli include McGill University Health Centre & McGill University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Active rehabilitation for children who are slow to recover following sport-related concussion.

TL;DR: It is suggested that involvement in controlled and closely monitored rehabilitation in the post-acute period may promote recovery in children and adolescents who present with atypical recovery following a concussion.
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A pilot study of active rehabilitation for adolescents who are slow to recover from sport‐related concussion

TL;DR: It is shown that postconcussive symptoms and functioning in adolescents following sports‐related concussion can be improved after participation in an active rehabilitation intervention and the introduction of graded light intensity exercise in the post‐acute period following concussion is safe, feasible and appears to have a positive impact on adolescents' functioning.
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Evaluation of an active rehabilitation program for concussion management in children and adolescents.

TL;DR: Children and adolescents participating in an active rehabilitation program displayed improved post-concussion symptom severity at follow-up compared to pre-intervention and demonstrated improved physical, cognitive, emotional and sleep-related post- Concussion symptoms scores.
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Wait Times for Paediatric Rehabilitation

TL;DR: Shorter waiting time was significantly associated with younger child's age and referral to one particular rehabilitation centre, and strategies to improve timely service delivery are needed.
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Balance and mobility in clinically recovered children and adolescents after a mild traumatic brain injury.

TL;DR: Clinical balance assessments may need to include static and dynamic measures, to capture possible performance difficulties in children recovered from a mild Traumatic Brain Injury, to enhance clinical decision making and prevent premature return to physical activities in children with mTBI.