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Poster Session Group C

Moderator: Shelley Wiechman, PhD


Predictive Value of Automated Pupillometry for Intracranial Hypertension in Traumatic Brain Injury
Madeline Greil, MD

Madeline Greil, MD, is a fourth-year neurosurgery resident at the University of Washington. She earned her medical degree from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio. During medical school she gained her first exposure to the operating room and instantly knew she wanted to be a surgeon. She continued to pursue her interest in the nervous system and was happy to discover that neurosurgery fit with her career goals, allowing her to treat complex patients with acute presentations.

Mentor: Robert Bonow, MD


Mild TBI and Diet: What we Know
Natasha Mehta, MD

Natasha Mehta, MD, is board certified in Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation and the current Brain Injury Medicine Fellow at the University of Washington. She strives to improve her patients’ quality of life by focusing on brain and body health, with the ultimate goal of achieving longevity in pain-free movement.

Primary Care Practice for Concussion Management: A Health Services Study at UW Medicine
Orli M. Shulein, MS,CCC-SLP & Tracy Herring, PhD

Orli Shulein, MS, CCC-SLP, is a speech-language pathologist and Rehabilitation Science doctoral student in the University of Washington Department of Rehabilitation Medicine. Clinically, she specializes in high-level cognitive rehabilitation following mild TBI/concussion. Her research examines biopsychosocial factors that influence concussion recovery, and she is interested in developing cognitive rehabilitation interventions that influence subacute recovery trajectories for at-risk individuals.
Tracy Herring, PhD, is a rehabilitation psychology postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at the University of Washington. Dr. Herring works clinically with individuals with disabilities and chronic health conditions. Her research interests include non-pharmacological management of symptoms and enhancing quality of life.
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