R
Roland R. Lee
Researcher at Veterans Health Administration
Publications - 145
Citations - 6675
Roland R. Lee is an academic researcher from Veterans Health Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetoencephalography & Traumatic brain injury. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 134 publications receiving 6040 citations. Previous affiliations of Roland R. Lee include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Natural History of Cavernous Malformations: A Prospective Study of 68 Patients
John L. Moriarity,Matthew Wetzel,Richard E. Clatterbuck,Sam Javedan,Jeannie Marie E. Sheppard,Karen Hoenig-Rigamonti,Nathan E. Crone,Steven N. Breiter,Roland R. Lee,Daniele Rigamonti +9 more
TL;DR: The clinical presentation and prospective hemorrhage rate reported here agree well with findings of other prospective studies, and should aid clinicians caring for patients with cavernous malformations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Non-expanded adipose stromal vascular fraction cell therapy for multiple sclerosis
Neil H. Riordan,Thomas E. Ichim,Wei-Ping Min,Hao-Hao Wang,Fabio Solano,Fabian Lara,Miguel Alfaro,Jorge Paz Rodriguez,Robert J. Harman,Amit N. Patel,Michael P. Murphy,Roland R. Lee,Boris Minev +12 more
TL;DR: The rationale for use of autologous SVF in treatment of multiple sclerosis is discussed, the experiences with three patients are described, and controlled trials of autOLOGous SVf in various inflammatory conditions are proposed.
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Pain sensitivity alterations as a function of lesion location in the parasylvian cortex
TL;DR: This series of cases points to the significance of the parietal operculum, either alone or with adjacent posterior insula, for normal pain thresholds, and supports the theory that the insula's involvement in nociceptive processing is related to the affective/motivational aspect of pain.
Journal ArticleDOI
Annular tears and disk herniation : Prevalence and contrast enhancement on MR images in the absence of low back pain or sciatica
TL;DR: Annular tears and focal disk protrusions on MR images, with or without contrast enhancement, are frequently found in an asymptomatic population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Conductivities of three-layer live human skull.
Akhtari M,Bryant Hc,Adam N. Mamelak,Adam N. Mamelak,E. R. Flynn,L. Heller,Jerry J. Shih,Mandelkern M,A. Matlachov,D. M. Ranken,Elaine Best,DiMauro Ma,Roland R. Lee,Sutherling Ww,Sutherling Ww +14 more
TL;DR: The conductivities of the skull layers are frequency dependent in the 10-90 Hz region and are non-ohmic in the 0.45-2.07 A/m2 region, which are much higher than those occurring in human brain.