L
Lori C. Jordan
Researcher at Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Publications - 210
Citations - 16498
Lori C. Jordan is an academic researcher from Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Pediatric stroke. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 186 publications receiving 11933 citations. Previous affiliations of Lori C. Jordan include Veterans Health Administration & University of California, Los Angeles.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Disorders of speech and language: aphasia, apraxia and dysarthria.
Lori C. Jordan,Argye E. Hillis +1 more
TL;DR: Recent studies of aphasia provide clues regarding language recovery poststroke, but further studies of the role of the ipsi and contralateral inferior frontal gyrus are necessary, and should be longitudinal.
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Cerebellar abnormality in children and young adults with tuberous sclerosis complex: MR and diffusion weighted imaging findings.
TL;DR: Cerebellar tubers differ from supratentorial tubers both concerning shape and contrast behavior and the exact etiology of contrast enhancement remains unclear.
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Haemorrhagic stroke in term and late preterm neonates
Christie J. Bruno,Lauren A. Beslow,Char Witmer,Arastoo Vossough,Lori C. Jordan,Sarah Zelonis,Daniel J. Licht,Rebecca Ichord,Sabrina E. Smith,Sabrina E. Smith +9 more
TL;DR: In this cohort of term neonates with acute HS, most presented with seizures, apnoea and/or poor feeding, and over half were due to haemorrhagic transformation of infarction.
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Prospects for primary stroke prevention in children with sickle cell anaemia.
TL;DR: This review will focus on the strengths and limitations associated with the current standard of care for primary prevention of ischaemic strokes in children with sickle cell anaemia by examining transcranial Doppler ultrasound screening followed by regular blood transfusion therapy when TCD measurement is above a threshold defined by a randomized clinical trial (RCT).
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Hemodynamic mechanisms underlying elevated oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) in moyamoya and sickle cell anemia patients.
Jennifer M. Watchmaker,Meher R. Juttukonda,Larry T Davis,Allison O. Scott,Carlos C Faraco,Melissa C. Gindville,Lori C. Jordan,Petrice M. Cogswell,Angela L. Jefferson,Howard S. Kirshner,Manus J. Donahue +10 more
TL;DR: OEF was significantly elevated in moyamoya participants compared to controls and was only weakly related to reductions in CVR, consistent with basal CBF level, rather than vascular reserve capacity, being most closely associated with OEF.