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Denitsa R. Radeva-Petrova

Researcher at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

Publications -  8
Citations -  627

Denitsa R. Radeva-Petrova is an academic researcher from Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Supine position. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications receiving 576 citations. Previous affiliations of Denitsa R. Radeva-Petrova include Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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The effect of muscle fatigue on in vivo tibial strains.

TL;DR: The fatigue state increases bone strains well above those recorded in rested individuals and may be a major factor in the stress fracture etiology.
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Bracing in external rotation for traumatic anterior dislocation of the shoulder

TL;DR: The findings show that external rotation bracing may not be as effective as previously reported in preventing recurrent anterior dislocation of the shoulder.
Journal Article

Risk factors for idiopathic frozen shoulder.

TL;DR: Doctors should be aware that diabetes is a specific risk factor for idiopathic frozen shoulder in both males and females and thyroid disorders are a non-specific risk factor in females only.
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Drugs for preventing malaria in pregnant women in endemic areas: any drug regimen versus placebo or no treatment

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of malaria chemoprevention given to pregnant women living in malaria endemic areas on substantive maternal and infant health outcomes were assessed. But, only six trials had adequate allocation concealment, and these trials were underpowered to detect an effect on maternal mortality.
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A prospective biomechanical study of the association between foot pronation and the incidence of anterior knee pain among military recruits

TL;DR: This study undertook a prospective study to test the hypothesis that exertional anterior knee pain is related to the static and dynamic parameters of foot pronation and found a statistically significant association between anterior kneePain and pronation velocity but the relationship was contradictory for the right and left foot.