5 results match your criteria: "Institute for Biomechanics of ETH[Affiliation]"

Patient-important outcome for the assessment of fracture repair.

Injury

June 2014

Onze Lieve Vrouwe Gasthuis, Joint Research, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Current evidence indicates that fracture healing assessment is limited to the use of one or two domains (such as pain, range of motion or mobility) in any single study. Functional outcome measures, which include physician-rated or observer-based impairment ratings and patient self-reported or observer-based activity limitation measures, better position the effectiveness of a given intervention towards patient-important outcomes. Health status measures, for example, cover a wide-range of physical, emotional, and social health dimensions.

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Introduction: Lack of standardization of outcome measurement has hampered an evidence-based approach to clinical practice and research.

Methods: We adopted a process of reviewing evidence on current use of measures and appropriate theoretical frameworks for health and disability to inform a consensus process that was focused on deriving the minimal set of core domains in distal radius fracture.

Results: We agreed on the following seven core recommendations: (1) pain and function were regarded as the primary domains, (2) very brief measures were needed for routine administration in clinical practice, (3) these brief measures could be augmented by additional measures that provide more detail or address additional domains for clinical research, (4) measurement of pain should include measures of both intensity and frequency as core attributes, (5) a numeric pain scale, e.

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The use of patient-reported outcome questionnaires is recommended in studies of the orthopaedic field. Reliable, validated tools are necessary to ensure the comparability of results across different studies, centers, and countries. The patient-rated wrist evaluation (PRWE) is a widely accepted and commonly used outcome measure in the self-evaluation after distal radius fractures.

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Implications for fracture healing of current and new osteoporosis treatments: an ESCEO consensus paper.

Calcif Tissue Int

May 2012

AO Clinical Priority Program "Fracture Fixation in Osteoporotic Bone", Institute for Biomechanics of ETH, Zurich, Switzerland.

Osteoporotic fracture healing is critical to clinical outcome in terms of functional recovery, morbidity, and quality of life. Osteoporosis treatments may affect bone repair, so insights into their impact on fracture healing are important. We reviewed the current evidence for an impact of osteoporosis treatments on bone repair.

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