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Karim Chamari

Researcher at Qatar Airways

Publications -  419
Citations -  20444

Karim Chamari is an academic researcher from Qatar Airways. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Sprint. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 376 publications receiving 15670 citations. Previous affiliations of Karim Chamari include Manouba University.

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Pathological knee laxity in elite women team handball players: a pilot study.

TL;DR: The ACL laxity thresholds may be useful measures to check the state of the ACL and to suggest full-thickness tears, as joint laxity appears to be a factor contributing to ACL tears in female handball players.
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Using Metabolomics to Differentiate Player Positions in Elite Male Basketball Games: A Pilot Study.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared metabolic profiles and movement patterns between different player positions and explored relationships between indicators of internal and external loads during elite male basketball games using video-based time motion analysis (VBTMA).
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Not all Forms of Muscle Hypertonia Worsen With Fatigue: A Pilot Study in Para Swimmers

TL;DR: Technical staff and medical classifiers should be aware of this specificity, because, in athletes with spastic dystonia, intense and prolonged motor activity could negatively affect competitive performance, creating a situation of unfairness among Para athletes belonging to the same sports class.
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Effect of Difficulty Level and Time-Pressure on the Morning-Evening Differences in Accuracy and Consistency of Throwing Darts Among 9-10 Year-Old Boys

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of task difficulty level and time-pressure on the morning-evening changes in psychomotor performance and perceived difficulty to it among 9-10 year-old boys.
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Assessment of executive functions in school-aged children: A narrative review

TL;DR: There has been increasing interest in assessing children's executive functions (EF) in the past three decades as mentioned in this paper , however, studies on the conceptualization and operationalization of this construct are incongruent and guidance for clinicians and researchers aiming to assess EF is insufficient due to measurement variability.