M
Matthew C.H.J. Morrall
Researcher at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
Publications - 21
Citations - 317
Matthew C.H.J. Morrall is an academic researcher from Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Acquired brain injury & Neurocognitive. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 21 publications receiving 236 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew C.H.J. Morrall include Leeds General Infirmary.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Parental and physician beliefs regarding the provision and content of written sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) information
Neti A. Gayatri,Matthew C.H.J. Morrall,Vivek Jain,Pawan Kashyape,Karen Pysden,Colin D. Ferrie +5 more
TL;DR: It is important to first address concerns before routinely imparting SUDEP information to parents following NICE recommendations, as literature indicates wariness of causing distress and anxiety, particularly to children/young people and their families through disclosing a nonpreventable risk.
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Cause and outcome of cerebellar mutism: evidence from a systematic review
Rosa Reed-Berendt,Bob Phillips,Susan Picton,Paul Chumas,Daniel Warren,John H. Livingston,Ellen Hughes,Matthew C.H.J. Morrall +7 more
TL;DR: The complexity and variability of data reporting, likely contributing factors and outcomes make cerebellar mutism difficult to predict in incidence and the degree of impact that may ensue.
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Neuropsychological outcomes following paediatric temporal lobe surgery for epilepsies: Evidence from a systematic review
Alice E. Flint,Alice E. Flint,Mitch Waterman,G. Bowmer,Gayatri Vadlamani,Paul Chumas,Matthew C.H.J. Morrall +6 more
TL;DR: There was some evidence for increased material-specific memory deficits after temporal lobe surgery based on resection side, and more positive cognitive outcome for those with lower pre-surgical ability level, but evidence highlights the need for improvements to quality of methodology and reporting.
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Pre-surgical mapping of eloquent cortex for paediatric epilepsy surgery candidates: Evidence from a review of advanced functional neuroimaging
Sarah Collinge,Garreth Prendergast,Steven Thomas Mayers,David Marshall,Poppy Siddell,Elizabeth Neilly,Colin D. Ferrie,Gayatri Vadlamani,Jeremy Macmullen-Price,Daniel Warren,Arshad Zaman,Paul Chumas,John Goodden,Matthew C.H.J. Morrall +13 more
TL;DR: If functional imaging techniques are to be the viable alternative for pre-surgical mapping of eloquent cortex for children, paradigms and analyses demonstrating concordance with independent measures must be developed.
Journal ArticleDOI
The use of stimulant medication to improve neurocognitive and learning outcomes in children diagnosed with brain tumours: a systematic review.
TL;DR: Current evidence indicates males, older age when treated, and higher baseline intelligence quotient (IQ) were predictive of greater responsiveness to MPH, while encouraging, additional research using a standardised protocol of outcome measures would be beneficial in identifying those likely to benefit from stimulant use.