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Shuu Jiun Wang

Researcher at Taipei Veterans General Hospital

Publications -  544
Citations -  30138

Shuu Jiun Wang is an academic researcher from Taipei Veterans General Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Migraine & Population. The author has an hindex of 71, co-authored 502 publications receiving 24800 citations. Previous affiliations of Shuu Jiun Wang include National Yang-Ming University & Taipei Medical University.

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Pain sensitivity and the primary sensorimotor cortices: a multimodal neuroimaging study.

TL;DR: It was shown that interindividual differences in pain sensitivity was related to the resting-state functional connectivity, interhemispheric GABA tone and GMD of the sensorimotor cortices, and high and low pain sensitivity could be predicted with high accuracy using imaging measures from the primary sensorim motor cortices.
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Impact of demented patients on their family members and care-givers in Taiwan.

TL;DR: The majority of the subjects had only limited understanding of dementia, and having medical insurance helps the family in caring for the demented patients, emotionally and socially, but not financially.
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Ophthalmoplegic migraine: migraine variant or cranial neuralgia?

TL;DR: A 54-year-old man, who experienced attacks of OM for more than 45 years, shows an enhanced nodular lesion in the root exit zone (REZ) of the left oculomotor nerve on magnetic resonance imaging, which obviously does not support a prior belief that the MRI findings imply demyelination as the underlying cause for OM.
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Migraine and Risk of Ocular Motor Cranial Nerve Palsies: A Nationwide Cohort Study.

TL;DR: Migraine is an unrecognized risk factor for OMCNP development in adults in adults and after a mean follow-up period of 3.1 years, the migraine cohort exhibited a greater risk of developing subsequent CN3, CN4, and CN6 palsies compared with the control cohort.
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Posterior cranial fossa crowdedness is related to age and sex: an magnetic resonance volumetric study.

TL;DR: The study shows that PCF CI is associated with age and sex, and can therefore be used as a surrogate to assess hindbrain atrophy in a cross-sectional sample and furthermore, sex- and age-specific normal ranges may be needed to evaluate the PCFCI in clinical practice.