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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Suzanne J. Snodgrass |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
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Article
Suzanne J. Snodgrass ; Christopher Croker ; Meghana Yerrapothu ; Samala Shepherd ; Peter Stanwell ; Carl Holder ; Christopher J. Oldmeadow ; James M. Elliott |Background: Neck muscle compositional changes may represent potential biomarkers contributing towards chronic neck-related pain and disability. Objectives: To determine differences in muscle volume in the cervical muscles of individuals with ch[...]Article
Background: Clinical prediction rules (CPRs) are evidence-based tools to aid clinical decision-making, and there are many that are relevant for physiotherapists, especially in the musculoskeletal field. However, a lack of awareness and understan[...]Article
Objectives Clinical prediction rules (CPRs) are widely used in medicine, but their application to physiotherapy practice is more recent and less widespread, and their implementation in physiotherapy clinical education has not been investigated.[...]Article
Objectives Clinical reasoning can be difficult to teach to pre-professional physiotherapy students due to their lack of clinical experience. It may be that tools such as clinical prediction rules (CPRs) could aid the process, but there has been[...]Article
Suzanne J. Snodgrass ; Rutger M.J. de Zoete ; Christopher Croker ; Meghana Yerrapothu ; James M. Elliott |Background: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is used to quantify the size and structure of the architecturally complex cervical spine musculature of individuals with traumatic and idiopathic neck pain. However, to our knowledge, no scan-rescan r[...]Article
Background Clinicians commonly assess cervical range of motion (ROM), but it has rarely been critically evaluated for its ability to contribute to patient diagnosis or prognosis, or whether it is affected by mobilisation/manipulation. Objectiv[...]Article
Objective To investigate whether muscle energy technique (MET) to the thoracic spine decreases the pain and disability associated with shoulder impingement syndrome (SIS). Design Single-center, 3-arm, randomized controlled trial, single-bli[...]