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Paul M. Matthews

Researcher at Imperial College London

Publications -  641
Citations -  102773

Paul M. Matthews is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multiple sclerosis & White matter. The author has an hindex of 140, co-authored 617 publications receiving 88802 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul M. Matthews include John Radcliffe Hospital & King's College London.

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Thalamic inflammation after brain trauma is associated with thalamo-cortical white matter damage

TL;DR: These findings support a link between axonal damage and persistent inflammation after brain injury and thalamic inflammation is correlated with thalamo-cortical tract damage.
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Cerebral plasticity in multiple sclerosis: insights from fMRI.

TL;DR: Applications to multiple sclerosis are reviewed, which address the challenging notion that adaptive cerebral plasticity may have an important influence on the relationship between MS pathology and its clinical expression.
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Two-dimensional population map of cortical connections in the human internal capsule.

TL;DR: To exploit diffusion imaging tractography to produce a two‐dimensional (xy) probabilistic population map of the cortical connections within the human internal capsule (IC).
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Lesion probability maps of white matter hyperintensities in elderly individuals: results of the Austrian stroke prevention study.

TL;DR: Punctate and early confluent to confluent WMH show distinguishable differences in their spatial distribution within a normal elderly population, suggesting the pattern of punctate WMH is probably a consequence of mixed etiologies.
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A morphometric, immunohistochemical, and in situ hybridization study of the dorsal raphe nucleus in major depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and suicide

TL;DR: The results show that mood disorders and suicide are associated with differential, limited morphological alterations of the DRN, and the contrasting influences of MDD and suicide may explain some of the discrepancies between previous studies.