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Chiarella Sforza

Researcher at University of Milan

Publications -  551
Citations -  13854

Chiarella Sforza is an academic researcher from University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Masticatory force. The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 520 publications receiving 11942 citations. Previous affiliations of Chiarella Sforza include National Research Council & University of São Paulo.

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Soft- and hard-tissue facial anthropometry in three dimensions: what's new.

TL;DR: New mathematical tools allow to fuse digital data obtained from various image analyzers, thus providing quantitative information for anatomical and nthropometric descriptions, medical evaluations, and forensic medicine.
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Age- and sex-related changes in the soft tissues of the orbital region.

TL;DR: During childhood, adolescence and young adulthood, the age-related trends for linear dimensions were similar to those found in previous studies, while no previous data exist for older adults, which could serve as a data base for the quantitative description of human orbital morphology during normal growth, development and aging.
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Electromyographic standardized indices in healthy Brazilian young adults and data reproducibility.

TL;DR: Electromyography of the right and left masseter and temporalis muscles was performed during maximum teeth clenching in 20 healthy subjects, free from periodontal problems, temporomandibular disorders, oro-facial myofunctional disorder, and with full permanent dentition to determine reference values of electromyographic standardized indices for the assessment of muscular symmetry and total activity.
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Facial morphometry of television actresses compared with normal women

TL;DR: The three-dimensional cutaneous facial characteristics of the beautiful women were significantly different from the characteristics of those of the normal women.
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The use of surface electromyography as a tool in differentiating temporomandibular disorders from neck disorders.

TL;DR: Monitoring of the masticatory muscles of patients with either "temporomandibular joint disorder" or "neck pain" found that patients with the latter had significantly more asymmetric muscle potentials than the control subjects.