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Anu M Räisänen

Researcher at University of Calgary

Publications -  34
Citations -  260

Anu M Räisänen is an academic researcher from University of Calgary. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Basketball. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 17 publications receiving 128 citations. Previous affiliations of Anu M Räisänen include Alberta Children's Hospital & Tampere University of Applied Sciences.

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Association between frontal plane knee control and lower extremity injuries: a prospective study on young team sport athletes

TL;DR: The single-leg squat test is not sensitive and specific enough to be used as a screening tool for future injury risk, and athletes displaying a large FPKPA in the SLS test had an elevated risk of acute lower extremity and ankle injuries.
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Prevalence of adolescent physical activity-related injuries in sports, leisure time, and school: the National Physical Activity Behaviour Study for children and Adolescents.

TL;DR: Frequency of PA was associated with a higher risk for PA-related injuries in sports clubs and leisure time and in all the three settings, injury prevalence was higher in 2016 than in 2014.
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Sudomotor Function as a Tool for Cardiorespiratory Fitness Level Evaluation: Comparison with Maximal Exercise Capacity

TL;DR: A significant increase in estimated VO2max, in hand and foot ESC and in risk score was observed after lifestyle intervention and was more important in subjects with the highest weekly activity.
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Single-Leg Squat as a Tool to Evaluate Young Athletes' Frontal Plane Knee Control.

TL;DR: This study suggests that by using the subjective assessment of the single-leg squat task, it is possible to detect differences in frontal plane knee control in young team sport athletes.
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Is This the Real Life, or Is This Just Laboratory? A Scoping Review of IMU-Based Running Gait Analysis

TL;DR: It is suggested that future studies using IMUs to record running biomechanics have mainly been conducted indoors, on a treadmill, at prescribed speeds, and over small distances should move out of the lab to less controlled and more real-world environments.