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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.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Parental and physician beliefs regarding the provision and content of written sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) information

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

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

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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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.