G
Gholamreza Olyaei
Researcher at Tehran University of Medical Sciences
Publications - 114
Citations - 1189
Gholamreza Olyaei is an academic researcher from Tehran University of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electromyography & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 105 publications receiving 978 citations. Previous affiliations of Gholamreza Olyaei include American Physical Therapy Association.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A comparative study of whole body vibration training and conventional training on knee proprioception and postural stability after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
TL;DR: Whole body vibration training improved proprioception and balance in athletes with reconstructed ACL.
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Whole-body vibration and the prevention and treatment of delayed-onset muscle soreness.
Atefeh Aminianfar,Mohammad Reza Hadian,Gholamreza Olyaei,Saeed Talebian,Amir Hoshang Bakhtiary +4 more
TL;DR: Administered before eccentric exercise, WBVT may reduce DOMS via muscle function improvement and further investigation should be undertaken to ascertain the effectiveness of WBVT in attenuating DOMS in athletes.
Journal Article
The effects of electrical nerve stimulation of the lower extremity on H-reflex and F-wave parameters.
TL;DR: The reduction of amplitude of H-reflexes and F-waves, H/M and F/M ratios demonstrated reduction of spasticity in patients group, and in spastic patients, the mean peak to peak amplitude and latencies were significantly decreased and the mean latencieswere significantly increased after application of TENS.
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Effects of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on lower extremity spasticity and motor function in stroke patients
Maryam Rastgoo,Soofia Naghdi,Nakhostin Ansari N,Gholamreza Olyaei,Shohreh Jalaei,Bijan Forogh,Hamid Reza Najari +6 more
TL;DR: Amelioration of lower extremity spasticity and motor function improvement after five daily sessions of inhibitory rTMS to the unaffected brain hemisphere which lasted for at least 1 week following the intervention.
Journal Article
A randomized, single blind placebo controlled clinical trial on the effect of continuous ultrasound on low back pain.
Noureddin Nakhostin Ansari,Safoora Ebadi,Saeed Talebian,Soofia Naghdi,Hasan Mazaheri,Gholamreza Olyaei,Shohreh Jalaie +6 more
TL;DR: The present study supports the significant effect of US on LBP, and suggests that US may improve the functional ability of patients with non specific low back pain.