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Meral A Tubi

Researcher at University of Southern California

Publications -  14
Citations -  357

Meral A Tubi is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 228 citations. Previous affiliations of Meral A Tubi include University of California, Los Angeles.

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Metabolic crisis occurs with seizures and periodic discharges after brain trauma.

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that seizures and pseudoperiodic discharges (PDs) may be mechanistically linked to metabolic crisis as measured by cerebral microdialysis.
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Early seizures and temporal lobe trauma predict post-traumatic epilepsy: A longitudinal study.

TL;DR: In a cohort of patients with a moderate-severe TBI, lesion location specificity is related to both a high incidence of early seizures and longitudinal development of PTE, and early seizures, whether convulsive or non-convulsive in nature, are associated with an increased risk for PTE development.
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White matter hyperintensities and their relationship to cognition: Effects of segmentation algorithm

TL;DR: In a sample of 260 non-demented participants from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI), the performance of five WMH segmentation methods was compared, by relating the WMH volumes derived using each method to both clinical diagnosis and composite measures of executive function and memory.
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Traumatic hemorrhagic brain injury: impact of location and resorption on cognitive outcome.

TL;DR: Traumatic parenchymal hemorrhages are largely clustered in the frontal and temporal lobes, and significant residual blood products are present at 6 months postinjury, a potential source of ongoing secondary brain injury.
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Longitudinal quantification and visualization of intracerebral haemorrhage using multimodal magnetic resonance and diffusion tensor imaging

TL;DR: Because neurological conditions such as intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) frequently exhibit pathology-related effects which lead to the exertion of mechanical pressure upon surrounding tissues and, thereby, to the deformation and/or displacement of WM fibres, DTI fibre tractography is highly suitable for assessing longitudinal changes in WM fibre integrity and mechanical displacement.