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Christian J Barton

Researcher at La Trobe University

Publications -  183
Citations -  6664

Christian J Barton is an academic researcher from La Trobe University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Patellofemoral pain syndrome & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 160 publications receiving 4807 citations. Previous affiliations of Christian J Barton include Centre College & Charles Sturt University.

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People with knee osteoarthritis attending physical therapy have broad education needs, and prioritize information about surgery and exercise: A concept mapping study.

TL;DR: People with knee osteoarthritis presenting to physical therapists have broad education needs, and prioritize information about surgery and exercise, according to a four-domain, eleven-cluster map with overarching domains.
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Six treatments have positive effects at three-months for people with patellofemoral pain: a systematic review with meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Six interventions had positive effects at three-months for people with PFP, with no intervention adequately tested beyond this timepoint, and five interventions demonstrated secondary efficacy compared to knee-targeted exercise therapy.
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Infographic. Achilles and patellar tendinopathy rehabilitation: strive to implement loading principles not recipes

TL;DR: In 2013, this group published a systematic review of Achilles and patellar tendinopathy rehabilitation programmes and found that Eccentric loading involving slow lengthening muscle contractions was, and among many still is, regarded as the first choice rehabilitation option for these lower limb overuse conditions.
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Subclassification of recreational runners with a running-related injury based on running kinematics evaluated with marker-based two-dimensional video analysis.

TL;DR: A subclassification based on the kinematic presentation may help clinicians in their clinical reasoning process when evaluating runners with a running-related injury and could inform targeted intervention strategy development.
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Fear of movement and (re)injury is associated with condition specific outcomes and health-related quality of life in women with patellofemoral pain

TL;DR: The relationship of greater fear of movement and (re)injury with greater disability, pain catastrophizing, pain sensitization, and poorer health-related quality of life highlights the potential importance of considering this psychological feature of PFP during assessment and management.