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Fereshteh Pourkazemi

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  33
Citations -  451

Fereshteh Pourkazemi is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chronic pain. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 25 publications receiving 292 citations. Previous affiliations of Fereshteh Pourkazemi include RMIT University & University of Western Sydney.

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Systematic review of timed stair tests.

TL;DR: It is suggested that timed stair tests should follow a more standardized methodology using a combination of ascent and descent and asking participants to complete the stairs as quickly and safely as possible.
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Predictors of chronic ankle instability after an index lateral ankle sprain: A systematic review

TL;DR: Of the three investigated potential predictors of chronic ankle instability after an index ankle sprain, only severity of initial sprain (grade II) predicted re-sprain; concerns about validity of the grading system suggest that these findings should be interpreted with caution.
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1000 Norms Project : protocol of a cross-sectional study cataloging human variation

TL;DR: This project will be a powerful resource to assist physiotherapists and clinicians across all areas of healthcare to diagnose pathology, track disease progression and evaluate treatment response and this reference dataset will also contribute to the development of robust patient-centred clinical trial outcome measures.
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Predictors of recurrent sprains after an index lateral ankle sprain: a longitudinal study

TL;DR: The combination of greater height or weight, feeling of instability, peak power and impaired balance predicted the occurrence of ankle sprain in almost 90% of participants and could form the basis for intervention targeted at reducing recurrence of sprain after an index sprain.
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Systematic review of chronic ankle instability in children

TL;DR: In children with a history of ankle sprain, perceived instability was reported in 23-71% whilst mechanical instability was found in 18-47% of children, and future research into the measurement and incidence of ankle instability in children is recommended.