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Raymond Tallis

Researcher at University of Manchester

Publications -  100
Citations -  5589

Raymond Tallis is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Consciousness. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 98 publications receiving 5252 citations. Previous affiliations of Raymond Tallis include University of Salford & St George's, University of London.

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Balance disability after stroke

TL;DR: Investigation of the frequency of balance disability; to characterize different levels of disability; and to identify demographics, stroke pathology factors, and impairments associated with balance disability found subjects with the most severe balance disability had more severe strokes, impairments, and disabilities.
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The cortical topography of human swallowing musculature in health and disease

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that swallowing musculature is discretely and somatotopically represented on the motor and premotor cortex of both hemispheres but displays interhemispheric asymmetry, independent of handedness.
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Age-specific incidence and prevalence rates of treated epilepsy in an unselected population of 2 052 922 and age-specific fertility rates of women with epilepsy

TL;DR: It is found that the incidence of epilepsy was higher in elderly people and lower in children, and women aged 25-39 years with treated epilepsy have significantly lower fertility rates than those in the general population.
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Reasons for Variability in the Reported Rate of Occurrence of Unilateral Spatial Neglect After Stroke

TL;DR: The clinical belief that USN occurs more frequently after RBD than LBD was apparently supported by a systematic review of published data, but an accurate estimate of the rates of occurrence and recovery after stroke could not be derived.
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Recovery of swallowing after dysphagic stroke relates to functional reorganization in the intact motor cortex.

TL;DR: Return of swallowing after dysphagic stroke is associated with increased pharyngeal representation in the unaffected hemisphere, suggesting a role for intact hemisphere reorganization in recovery.