R
Robin A. Hanks
Researcher at Wayne State University
Publications - 148
Citations - 6070
Robin A. Hanks is an academic researcher from Wayne State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 141 publications receiving 5357 citations. Previous affiliations of Robin A. Hanks include Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai & Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Predictors of caregiver and family functioning following traumatic brain injury: social support moderates caregiver distress.
TL;DR: Caregiver distress increased with longer time after injury, cognitive dysfunction, and unawareness of deficit in care recipients, whereas these characteristics were not associated with distress among caregivers with adequate social support.
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Neuropsychologic and Functional Outcome After Complicated Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Shauna Kashluba,Shauna Kashluba,Shauna Kashluba,Robin A. Hanks,Robin A. Hanks,Robin A. Hanks,Joseph E. Casey,Scott R. Millis +7 more
TL;DR: No differences on functional ability measures were found between the TBI groups at either time period postinjury, with both groups exhibiting incomplete recovery of functional status at the 1-year follow-up.
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Global White Matter Analysis of Diffusion Tensor Images Is Predictive of Injury Severity in Traumatic Brain Injury
Randall R. Benson,Shashwath A. Meda,Sriram Vasudevan,Zhifeng Kou,Koushik A. Govindarajan,Robin A. Hanks,Scott R. Millis,Malek I. Makki,Zahid Latif,William M. Coplin,Jay M. Meythaler,E. Mark Haacke +11 more
TL;DR: FA changes appear to be correlated with injury severity suggesting a role in early diagnosis and prognosis of TBI, possibly reflecting widespread involvement.
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Measures of executive functioning as predictors of functional ability and social integration in a rehabilitation sample.
TL;DR: There is a dissociation between measures of functional outcome, such that objective and behaviorally oriented measures of disability are strongly related to each other; however, they are not related to perceptions of general health status (SF-36).
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Neuropsychological performance and sleep disturbance following traumatic brain injury.
TL;DR: Sleep disturbance among patients with TBI may be associated with a particular constellation of neuropsychological abilities, and performance on selected measures of cognitive functioning significantly improved prediction of sleep disturbance.