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Frans Nollet

Researcher at University of Amsterdam

Publications -  209
Citations -  6149

Frans Nollet is an academic researcher from University of Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Physical fitness. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 193 publications receiving 4952 citations. Previous affiliations of Frans Nollet include VU University Amsterdam & VU University Medical Center.

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Effects and moderators of exercise on quality of life and physical function in patients with cancer : An individual patient data meta-analysis of 34 RCTs

Laurien M. Buffart, +47 more
TL;DR: In conclusion, exercise, and particularly supervised exercise, effectively improves QoL and PF in patients with cancer with different demographic and clinical characteristics during and following treatment.
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Effect of Custom-made Footwear on Foot Ulcer Recurrence in Diabetes A multicenter randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Offloading-improved custom-made footwear does not significantly reduce the incidence of plantar foot ulcer recurrence in diabetes compared with custom- made footwear that does not undergo such improvement, unless it is worn as recommended.
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Risk Factors for Plantar Foot Ulcer Recurrence in Neuropathic Diabetic Patients

TL;DR: The presence of a minor lesion was clearly the strongest predictor, while recommended use of adequately offloading footwear was a strong protector against ulcer recurrence from unrecognized repetitive trauma, defining clear targets for diabetic foot screening and ulcer prevention.
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Physiotherapy in the intensive care unit: an evidence-based, expert driven, practical statement and rehabilitation recommendations

TL;DR: These recommendations form a protocol for treating people in an intensive care unit, based on best available evidence in mid-2014, as recommended by the 'Dutch Evidence Based Guideline Development Platform'.
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Impact of ICU-acquired weakness on post-ICU physical functioning: a follow-up study

TL;DR: ICU-acquired weakness is independently associated with higher post-ICU mortality and with clinically relevant lower physical functioning in survivors at 6 months after ICU discharge.