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Toni S. Roddey

Researcher at Texas Woman's University

Publications -  49
Citations -  2324

Toni S. Roddey is an academic researcher from Texas Woman's University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Population. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 45 publications receiving 2156 citations. Previous affiliations of Toni S. Roddey include College of Health Sciences, Bahrain.

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Shoulder arthroplasty with or without resurfacing of the glenoid in patients who have osteoarthritis.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported that total shoulder arthroplasty provided superior pain relief compared with hemiarthroplasty in patients who had glenohumeral osteoarthritis, but it was associated with an increased cost of $1177 per patient.
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Arthroscopic treatment of anterior-inferior glenohumeral instability. Two to five-year follow-up.

TL;DR: The results of the present study suggest that the technique of arthroscopic treatment of anterior-inferior glenohumeral instability is better than previous arthroScopic techniques and is equivalent to open repair.
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Functional activity characteristics of individuals with shoulder dysfunctions

TL;DR: Test the reliability of the FASTRAK 3-dimensional motion analysis and surface electromyography systems to analyze 3-D shoulder complex movements during functional tasks and compare motion patterns between subjects with and without shoulder dysfunctions (SDs).
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Comparison of the University of California–Los Angeles Shoulder Scale and the Simple Shoulder Test With the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index: Single-Administration Reliability and Validity

TL;DR: All shoulder measures demonstrated good internal consistency, suggesting that all items for each scale measure the same construct, However, the SEMs for all scales were high, suggest that patients may not distinguish between pain and function.
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Dynamic Assessment of Health Outcomes: Time to Let the CAT Out of the Bag?

TL;DR: Several IRT models that can be used as the basis of CAT, a measurement approach in which the selection of items is tailored for each respondent, are described and practical issues associated with the use of adaptive scaling in research settings are discussed.