Jack Foreman
Transitional Learning Center
4 Papers
Jack Foreman is an academic researcher from Transitional Learning Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Traumatic brain injury & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Psychiatric Disease and Post-Acute Traumatic Brain Injury.
Dennis J. Zgaljardic,Gary S. Seale,Lynn A. Schaefer,Richard O. Temple,Jack Foreman,Timothy R. Elliott +5 more
TL;DR: The current review of the literature considers the common psychiatric problems affecting individuals with TBI in the post-acute period, including personality changes, psychosis, executive dysfunction, depression, anxiety, and substance misuse.
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Neuropsychological and physiological correlates of fatigue following traumatic brain injury
Dennis J. Zgaljardic,William J. Durham,Kurt A. Mossberg,Jack Foreman,Keta Joshipura,Brent E. Masel,Brent E. Masel,Randall J. Urban,Melinda Sheffield-Moore +8 more
TL;DR: The aetiology of TBI-related fatigue can be viewed as a multifactorial and complex model impacting physiological systems (i.e. endocrine, skeletal muscle and cardiorespiratory) that can be directly or indirectly influenced by neuropsychological correlates including cognitive and psychological impairment.
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Posttraumatic Hypopituitarism: Neuroendocrine Dysfunction and Treatment
Dennis J. Zgaljardic,Lisa A. Kreber,Jack Foreman,Randall J. Urban +3 more
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: Analysis of the signs and symptoms of pituitary axis dysfunction suggest that in a significant proportion of patients with TBI, the observed cognitive, psychiatric, and physical/functioning impairments may actually be the result of abnormal growth hormone secretion and could potentially be reversed with growth hormone replacement therapy.
1
Hypoaminoacidemia Characterizes Chronic Traumatic Brain Injury
William J. Durham,Jack Foreman,Kathleen M. Randolph,Christopher P. Danesi,Heidi Spratt,Brian D Masel,Jennifer R. Summons,Charan K Singh,Melissa Morrison,Claudia Robles,Cindy Wolfram,Lisa A. Kreber,Randall J. Urban,Melinda Sheffield-Moore,Brent E. Masel +14 more
TL;DR: It is found that many years after injury, TBI patients exhibit abnormal metabolic responses and altered relationships between circulating amino acids, cytokines, and hormones, which are consistent with TBI, inducing a chronic disease state in patients.