Publications by authors named "M Crowell"

Background: The United States military strives to prepare soldiers physically and mentally for war while preventing injury and attrition. Previous research has focused on physical injury risk factors but has not prospectively examined psychological risk factors.

Purpose: This study's purpose was to investigate whether self-efficacy is a risk factor for musculoskeletal injury in an initial military training environment and compare it to other known risk factors.

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Background: In-clinic gait retraining has been effective in modifying suspected biomechanical risk factors for running injury, but its feasibility is often limited by multiple clinic visits. This randomized clinical trial investigated the effects of a telehealth-based gait retraining intervention on running biomechanics, pain, and function in previously injured runners.

Methods: Twenty-three participants recovering from lower extremity injuries were randomized to a control or intervention group.

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Background: Traumatic shoulder instability is a common injury in the general population and the military. Surgical stabilization surgery reduces recurrence rates compared with nonsurgical management. Time since surgery is generally the primary measure of return to sport.

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Background: Limitations exist with current ACLR functional testing assessments that may be mitigated by including single-leg multi-directional testing.

Hypothesis/purpose: To compare Anterior Cruciate Ligament-Return to Sport after Injury Scale (ACL-RSI) scores, limb symmetry index (LSI) of the single-leg vertical jump (SLVJ), single-leg medial rotation hop (SLMRH), single-leg lateral hop (SLLH), and isokinetic quadriceps strength between participants with an ACLR and healthy controls and assess predictors of quadriceps strength asymmetry. It was hypothesized that ACL-RSI scores and LSIs for all tests would differ between ACLR and healthy control groups and within the ACLR group a strong correlation would exist between all outcome measures and quadriceps strength.

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Article Synopsis
  • The efficacy of upadacitinib has been evaluated through trials, specifically comparing different dosages against placebo and a head-to-head trial against dupilumab.
  • A population-adjusted indirect comparison was performed to estimate the potential performance of upadacitinib 15 mg using data from previous studies, focusing on multiple treatment outcomes for adult patients.
  • Results indicated that upadacitinib 30 mg had the highest response rates across various outcomes at weeks 4, 16, and 24, followed by upadacitinib 15 mg and then dupilumab, suggesting it may be the most effective treatment for moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis.
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