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Giuseppe Massazza

Researcher at University of Turin

Publications -  99
Citations -  1364

Giuseppe Massazza is an academic researcher from University of Turin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Hip fracture. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 91 publications receiving 1083 citations.

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Arthroscopic treatment of hip chondral defects: autologous chondrocyte transplantation versus simple debridement--a pilot study.

TL;DR: This study indicates that an ACT procedure can be used in the hip for acetabular chondral defects, and improves after the procedure compared with the group that underwent debridement alone.
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Mobile smartphone applications for body position measurement in rehabilitation: a review of goniometric tools.

TL;DR: A systematic review of apps for smartphones validated for body position measurement relevant to physical medicine and rehabilitation highlights the validated goniometer apps that physiatrists and other health care practitioners can use with confidence in research and clinical practice.
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The Mini-BESTest: a review of psychometric properties.

TL;DR: The results support the reliability, validity, and responsiveness of this instrument and it can be considered a standard balance measure, however, it would be valuable to learn more about how this scale performs in different diseases causing balance deficits and to better define the minimal clinically important difference for each disease.
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Posterior Humeral Avulsion of the Glenohumeral Ligament: A Clinical Review of 9 Cases

TL;DR: The characteristic conditions in which a posterior humeral avulsion of the glenohumeral ligament (PHAGL) lesion occurs are reported, defining also the different possibility of association with other intra-articular shoulder pathologies.
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Take-off analysis of the Olympic ski jumping competition (HS-106m).

TL;DR: The comparison between the take-off techniques of the best jumpers showed that even though the more marked upper body movement creates higher air resistance, it does not necessarily result in shorter jumping distance if the exposure time to high air resistance is not too long.