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Sarah Y. Grewal, DO

Sarah Y. Grewal, DO

Sarah Y. Grewal, DO

Sarah Y. Grewal, DO, is an attending neurologist with the Division of Neurology at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.


215-590-1719

About Sarah Y. Grewal, DO

Titles

Attending Neurologist

Leadership and Memberships

Memberships in Professional Organizations

2021-present, American Clinical MEG Society
2021-present, American Clinical Neurophysiology Society
2016-present, American Epilepsy Society
2016-present, American Academy of Pediatrics
2016-present, American Academy of Neurology
2016-present, American Osteopathic Association

Education & training

Medical Degree

DO - Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Philadelphia, PA

Residency

Child Neurology - St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA
Pediatrics - St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA

Fellowship

Clinical Neurophysiology and Epilepsy - National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, MD

Team affiliations

View fewer all team affiliations View all all team affiliations

Publications

Publications

2015

Edgar, JC, Khan SY, Blaskey, L, et al. Neuromagnetic oscillations predict evoked-response latency delays and core language deficits in autism spectrum disorders. J Autism Dev Disord 2015;45(2):395-405

2014

Edgar, JC, Lanza, MR, Khan, SY, et al. Missing and delayed auditory responses in young and older children with autism spectrum disorders. Front Hum Neurosci 2014 6;8:417

2012

Simons VIP Consortium (Khan, SY). A 600kb deletion syndrome at 16p11.2 leads to energy imbalance and neuropsychiatric disorders. J Med Genet 2012;49(10):660-668

Simons VIP Consortium (Khan, SY). Simons Variation in Individuals Project (Simons VIP): a genetics-first approach to studying autism spectrum and related neurodevelopmental disorders. Neuron 2012;73(6):1063-1067

Nagae, L.M., Zarnow, D.M., Blaskey, L., Dell, J., Khan, S.Y., Qasmieh, S., Levy, S.E., Roberts, T.P.. Elevated mean diffusivity in the left hemisphere superior longitudinal fasciculus in autism spectrum disorders increases with more profound language impairment. American Journal of Neuroradiology. 2012, Oct; 33(9): 1720-1725.

Roberts, T.P., Heiken, K., Khan, S.Y., Qasmieh, S., Blaskey, L., Solot, C., Parker, W.A., Verma, R., & Edgar, J.C. Delayed magnetic mismatch negativity field, but not auditory M100 response, in specific language impairment. Neuroreport. 2012, May; 23(8): 463-468.

2011

Roberts, T.P., Cannon, K.M., Tavabi, K., Blaskey, L., Khan, S.Y., Monroe, J.F., Qasmieh, S., Levy, S.E., & Edgar, J.C. Auditory magnetic mismatch field latency: a biomarker for language impairment in autism. Biological Psychiatry. 2011, Aug; 70(3): 263-269.

2010

Khan, SY, Edgar, JC, Monroe, JF, et al. Obtaining auditory M100 responses: success rates in children autism spectrum disorders. IFMBE Proceedings 2010;28:401-404 9. Roberts TP, Khan SY, Rey M, et al. MEG detection of delayed auditory evoked responses in autism spectrum disorders: towards an imaging biomarker for autism. Autism Res 2010;3:8-18

2009

Roberts TP, Khan SY, Blaskey L, et al. Developmental correlation of diffusion anisotropy with auditory-evoked response. Neuroreport 2009;20:1586-1591

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