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Opinder Sahota

Researcher at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust

Publications -  125
Citations -  5037

Opinder Sahota is an academic researcher from Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hip fracture & Osteoporosis. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 114 publications receiving 4198 citations. Previous affiliations of Opinder Sahota include National Health Service & University of Nottingham.

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Effect of comorbidities and postoperative complications on mortality after hip fracture in elderly people: prospective observational cohort study

TL;DR: In elderly people with hip fracture, the presence of three or more comorbidities is the strongest preoperative risk factor and lead to increased mortality.
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Consensus statement for perioperative care in total hip replacement and total knee replacement surgery: Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS ®) Society recommendations

TL;DR: There is insufficient evidence to recommend that one surgical technique (type of approach, use of a minimally invasive technique, prosthesis choice, or use of computer-assisted surgery) over another will independently effect achievement of discharge criteria.
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The relationship between vitamin D and parathyroid hormone: calcium homeostasis, bone turnover, and bone mineral density in postmenopausal women with established osteoporosis.

TL;DR: This study identifies a distinct group of patients with hypovitaminosis D and a blunted PTH response who show a disruption in calcium homeostasis but protected against PTH-mediated bone loss and has clinical implications with respect to disease definition.
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A randomised, controlled comparison of different calcium and vitamin D supplementation regimens in elderly women after hip fracture: The Nottingham Neck of Femur (NONOF) Study

TL;DR: Vitamin D supplementation, either orally or with injected vitamin D, suppresses parathyroid hormone, increases bone mineral density and reduces falls, and effects may be more marked with calcium co-supplementation.
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Nottingham Hip Fracture Score as a predictor of one year mortality in patients undergoing surgical repair of fractured neck of femur

TL;DR: The Nottingham Hip Fracture Score can be used to stratify the risk of 1 yr mortality after hip fracture surgery and was investigated whether the NHFS was a predictor of 1 year mortality in patients undergoing surgical repair of fractured neck of femur.