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Brian C. Werner

Researcher at University of Virginia

Publications -  357
Citations -  7052

Brian C. Werner is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Arthroplasty. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 295 publications receiving 4931 citations. Previous affiliations of Brian C. Werner include Wake Forest University & University of Arizona.

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Trends in Pediatric and Adolescent Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury and Reconstruction.

TL;DR: A significant increase in the overall diagnosis of ACL injury and ACL reconstruction in both pediatric and adolescent patients is demonstrated, rising at a rate significantly higher than adults.
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Patient-reported outcome measures in spine surgery.

TL;DR: Given the increasing importance and use of patient‐reported outcome measures, knowledge regarding proper implementation of these tools is essential for accurate assessment of general health quality, function, and pain.
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What Change in American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Score Represents a Clinically Important Change After Shoulder Arthroplasty

TL;DR: Patients with glenohumeral arthritis or rotator cuff tear arthropathy who undergo primary conventional total or reverse shoulder arthroplasty and have at least a nine-point improvement their ASES score experience a clinically important change, whereas those who have at a 23-level study level a clinical preoperative function experience a clinical benefit.
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Arthroscopic Suprapectoral and Open Subpectoral Biceps Tenodesis A Comparison of Minimum 2-Year Clinical Outcomes

TL;DR: Arthroscopic suprapectoral and open subpectoral biceps tenodesis both yield excellent clinical and functional results for the management of isolated superior labrum or long head biceps pathology.
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Validation of an innovative method of shoulder range-of-motion measurement using a smartphone clinometer application

TL;DR: The smartphone clinometer has excellent agreement with a goniometer-based gold standard for measurement of shoulder ROM in both healthy and symptomatic subjects, and there is good correlation among different skill levels of providers for measurements obtained using the smartphone.