M
Mohsen M. El-Sayyad
Researcher at Cairo University
Publications - 5
Citations - 40
Mohsen M. El-Sayyad is an academic researcher from Cairo University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual analogue scale & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 20 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Pre-training and Post-training Nordic Exercise on Hamstring Injury Prevention, Recurrence, and Severity in Soccer Players
TL;DR: The use of NHE as a prevention protocol was effective in reducing all hamstring injuries with the use ofNHE during pre-training and post-training having the greatest effect.
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Weight knowledge and weight magnitude: impact on lumbosacral loading
TL;DR: The results suggest that subjects changed their lifting manner when handling unknown lightweight that increased spine loading to levels equivalent to handling heavier weights, which may be important for high frequency lifting tasks common in modern distribution centres.
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Changes in muscular activity and lumbosacral kinematics in response to handling objects of unknown mass magnitude
TL;DR: Under these conditions, it was concluded that mass magnitude has more impact than mass knowledge, however, handling objects of unknown mass magnitude could be hazardous, particularly when lifting light masses, in that they can increase mechanical burden on the lumbosacral spine due to increased muscular exertion and acceleration.
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Effect of Adding Neural Mobilization Versus Myofascial Release to Stabilization Exercises after Lumbar Spine Fusion: A Randomized Controlled Trial
TL;DR: Patients who received NM or MFR combined with SE had better improvement, in favor of the NM group, regarding disability and pain than patients who received SE alone after LSF.
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Short-term effect of adding Graston technique to exercise program in treatment of patients with cervicogenic headache: a single-blinded, randomized controlled trial.
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of adding the Graston technique to an exercise program on pain intensity, neck disability, cervical range of motion, headache frequency and duration, and medication intake in subjects with cervicogenic headache was investigated.