Publications by authors named "Salsabil Haque"

While inadequate oral health has been linked to adverse mental health outcomes, there is limited understanding of such implications among refugees who bear a disproportionate burden of oral health disparities. This study aims to examine the effect of self-rated oral health on depression, anxiety, and stress among Syrian refugee parents resettled in Ontario. In this cross-sectional study, a total of 540 Syrian refugee parents who resided in Ontario for an average of 4 years and had at least one child under 18 years old were interviewed between March 2021 and March 2022.

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Background: Patients who present with spatial neglect after stroke often perform normally on tests for neglect after a few weeks. Whereas tests for neglect are often performed directly in front of a patient, in their actual environments many important stimuli may be present within their left or right hemispace. The presence and severity of neglect often depends on the hemisphere injured.

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Right hemispheric damage (RHD) caused by strokes often induce attentional disorders such as hemispatial neglect. Most patients with neglect over time have a reduction in their ipsilesional spatial attentional bias. Despite this improvement in spatial bias, many patients remain disabled.

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Objective: This was to learn how chronic right hemispheric damage (RHD) versus left hemispheric damage (LHD) may influence attentional biases in proximal and distal space.

Background: Prior research has suggested that the left hemisphere primarily attends to proximal space and the right hemisphere to distal space. The purpose of this study was to contrast line bisection performed in proximal versus distal space in patients with chronic LHD versus RHD.

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Objectives: This report describes a patient with right putaminal hemorrhage who showed ipsilateral (right-sided) neglect.

Background: Although lesions to subcortical regions may result in contralateral hemispatial neglect, ipsilateral neglect from putaminal damage has not been reported. It has been posited that ipsilateral neglect from unilateral frontal lesions may be induced by a contralateral attentional grasp.

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