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Robert I. Grossman

Researcher at New York University

Publications -  406
Citations -  30100

Robert I. Grossman is an academic researcher from New York University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Multiple sclerosis. The author has an hindex of 97, co-authored 403 publications receiving 29140 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert I. Grossman include Children's Hospital of Philadelphia & University of Pennsylvania.

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Intracranial hematomas: imaging by high-field MR.

TL;DR: Characteristic intensity patterns were observed in the evolution of the hematomas, which could be staged as acute, subacute, or chronic, and two of these mechanisms increase in proportion to the square of the magnetic field magnitude.
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Experimental allergic encephalomyelitis and multiple sclerosis: lesion characterization with magnetization transfer imaging.

TL;DR: The data suggest that calculated MTR obtained with in vivo MTI may enable differentiation of edema from demyelination, and that MTI can demonstrate white matter abnormalities that cannot be seen with standard spin-echo or gradient-echo magnetic resonance imaging.
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Diffuse axonal injury in mild traumatic brain injury: a diffusion tensor imaging study

TL;DR: Although mean diffusivity and fractional anisotropy abnormalities in these patients with TBI were too subtle to be detected with the whole-brain histogram analysis, they are present in brain areas that are frequent sites of DAI.
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The role of magnetic resonance techniques in understanding and managing multiple sclerosis

TL;DR: This review summarizes the current uses of MR in multiple sclerosis, based on the proceedings of a recent international workshop, under four headings: technical issues; role in diagnosis; natural history studies in understanding the disease; application in clinical trials; and theory and methodology of relevant technical issues.
Journal Article

Age-Related Total Gray Matter and White Matter Changes in Normal Adult Brain. Part I: Volumetric MR Imaging Analysis

TL;DR: Quantitative analysis of GM and WM volumes can improve the understanding of brain atrophy due to normal aging; this knowledge may be valuable in distinguishing atrophy of disease patterns from characteristics of the normal aging process.