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Patients Undergoing Shoulder Stabilization Surgery Have Elevated Shoulder Activity Compared With Sex- and Age-Matched Healthy Controls
MOON Shoulder Instability Group
Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences (ICTS)
Division of Sport Surgery
Research output
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Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
10
Scopus citations
Overview
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Dive into the research topics of 'Patients Undergoing Shoulder Stabilization Surgery Have Elevated Shoulder Activity Compared With Sex- and Age-Matched Healthy Controls'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Age-matched
100%
Healthy Controls
100%
Activity Level
100%
Shoulder Function
100%
Stabilization Surgery
100%
Shoulder Stabilization
100%
High Activity
44%
Risk Factors
11%
Patient-completed
11%
Clinical Significance
11%
Healthy Population
11%
Surgical Intervention
11%
Young Males
11%
Failure Risk
11%
Shoulder Instability Surgery
11%
Shoulder Disorders
11%
Activity Scale
11%
Shoulder Instability
11%
Shoulder Activity Scale
11%
Reporting Frequency
11%
Score Reporting
11%
Operative Stabilization
11%
Identical Distribution
11%
Nursing and Health Professions
Recurrent Shoulder Dislocation
100%
Surgery
50%
Cross-Sectional Study
50%
Shoulder Disease
50%
Psychology
Study Design
100%