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Diana Andrei

Publications -  21
Citations -  124

Diana Andrei is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sagittal plane & Back pain. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 19 publications receiving 106 citations.

Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Kinect based intelligent e-rehabilitation system in physical therapy.

TL;DR: The first laboratory tests confirm the utility of this intelligent Kinect and fuzzy inference system based e-rehabilitation system for the initial posture detection, motion range and exercise tracking.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emergency pelvic stabilization in patients with pelvic posttraumatic instability.

TL;DR: The external fixator is very useful especially in the acute phase, acquiring an acceptable reduction and an adequate stability in the partially unstable lesions (Tile B) and also reduces the pelvic volume and bleeding, being considered essential within the resuscitation protocols.
Journal ArticleDOI

The variability of vertebral body volume and pain associated with osteoporotic vertebral fractures: conservative treatment versus percutaneous transpedicular vertebroplasty

TL;DR: In this study on OVF, vertebroplasty delivered superior clinical and radiological outcomes over the first year from intervention when compared to conservative treatment of patients with osteoporotic compression fractures without neurological deficit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Utility of the pedicle subtraction osteotomy for the correction of sagittal spine imbalance

TL;DR: To limit the risk of mechanical complications and to achieve a good sagittal balance, PSO must be associated with additional SPOs or a second corrective surgery to obtain a solid anterior fusion.
Journal Article

Physical therapy vs. medical treatment of musculoskeletal disorders in dentistry – a randomised prospective study

TL;DR: Improvements of functional parameters and increase in work productivity were recorded in dentists who followed physical therapy and to make correlations among patients' pain levels, their overall health status, and the number of days of work absenteeism.