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Your search keyword '"BRYANT, ADAM L."' showing total 29 results

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29 results on '"BRYANT, ADAM L."'

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1. Is quadriceps strength associated with patellofemoral joint loading after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction?

2. Patellofemoral joint loading and early osteoarthritis after ACL reconstruction.

3. Muscle Force Contributions to Anterior Cruciate Ligament Loading.

4. Quadriceps muscle strength at 2 years following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction is associated with tibiofemoral joint cartilage volume.

5. Patellofemoral and tibiofemoral joint loading during a single-leg forward hop following ACL reconstruction.

6. Patellar cartilage increase following ACL reconstruction with and without meniscal pathology: a two-year prospective MRI morphological study.

7. Effects of Pubertal Maturation on ACL Forces During a Landing Task in Females.

8. Between-Limb Differences in Patellofemoral Joint Forces During Running at 12 to 24 Months After Unilateral Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.

9. Modelling the loading mechanics of anterior cruciate ligament.

10. Tibiofemoral joint structural change from 2.5 to 4.5 years following ACL reconstruction with and without combined meniscal pathology.

11. Deficits in Quadriceps Force Control After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury: Potential Central Mechanisms.

12. Greater magnitude tibiofemoral contact forces are associated with reduced prevalence of osteochondral pathologies 2-3 years following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.

13. Greater knee flexion excursion/moment in hopping is associated with better knee function following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.

14. Cartilage quantitative T2 relaxation time 2-4 years following isolated anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.

15. Poor knee function after ACL reconstruction is associated with attenuated landing force and knee flexion moment during running.

16. Quadriceps cortical adaptations in individuals with an anterior cruciate ligament injury.

17. Does meniscal pathology alter gait knee biomechanics and strength post-ACL reconstruction?

18. Tibial acceleration profiles during the menstrual cycle in female athletes.

19. Associations of isokinetic knee steadiness with hop performance in patients with ACL deficiency.

20. Neuromuscular deficits after peripheral joint injury: a neurophysiological hypothesis.

21. Morphology of hamstring torque-time curves following ACL injury and reconstruction: mechanisms and implications.

22. Hamstring antagonist torque generated in vivo following ACL rupture and ACL reconstruction.

23. Successful feed-forward strategies following ACL injury and reconstruction.

24. Morphology of knee extension torque-time curves following anterior cruciate ligament injury and reconstruction.

25. Dynamic restraint capacity of the hamstring muscles has important functional implications after anterior cruciate ligament injury and anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.

26. Isokinetic dynamometry in anterior cruciate ligament injury and reconstruction.

27. Limiting the Use of Electromyography and Ground Reaction Force Data Changes the Magnitude and Ranking of Modelled Anterior Cruciate Ligament Forces.

28. Effects of Footwear on Anterior Cruciate Ligament Forces during Landing in Young Adult Females.

29. Cartilage quantitative T2 relaxation time 2–4 years following isolated anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.

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