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Silvano Ferrari

Researcher at University of Padua

Publications -  31
Citations -  839

Silvano Ferrari is an academic researcher from University of Padua. The author has contributed to research in topics: Low back pain & Oswestry Disability Index. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 30 publications receiving 652 citations. Previous affiliations of Silvano Ferrari include University of Bologna.

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Responsiveness of the Oswestry Disability Index and the Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire in Italian subjects with sub-acute and chronic low back pain

TL;DR: The Italian ODI and RMDQ proved to be sensitive in detecting clinical changes after conservative treatment for subacute and chronic LBP, thus allowing cross-cultural comparisons and stimulating cross-national studies.
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Development of the Italian version of the oswestry disability index (ODI-I): A cross-cultural adaptation, reliability, and validity study

TL;DR: The Italian version of the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI-I) questionnaire was successfully translated into Italian, showing good factorial structure and psychometric properties, replicating the results of existing language versions of the questionnaire.
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Development of the Italian version of the Pain Catastrophising Scale (PCS-I): cross-cultural adaptation, factor analysis, reliability, validity and sensitivity to change.

TL;DR: The successfully translated Italian version of the PCS has good psychometric properties replicating those of other versions, including the Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia and the Positive Affect and Negative Affect Scale.
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Responsiveness and Minimal Important Change of the Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire and Short Forms in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain

TL;DR: This study suggests that the PSEQ and its short versions are responsive measures of pain self-efficacy in patients with CLBP, adding to previous literature on their validity and reliability.
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A literature review of clinical tests for lumbar instability in low back pain: validity and applicability in clinical practice

TL;DR: The data from the studies provided information on the methods used and suggest that PLE is the most appropriate tests to detect lumbar instability in specific LBP, however, due to the lack of available papers on other lombar conditions, these findings should be confirmed with studies on non-specific LBP patients.