Medical conditions and outcomes at 1 year after acute traumatic spinal cord injury in a Greek and a Swedish region: a prospective, population-based study

scientific article published on 22 December 2009

Medical conditions and outcomes at 1 year after acute traumatic spinal cord injury in a Greek and a Swedish region: a prospective, population-based study is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1038/SC.2009.147
P8608Fatcat IDrelease_cmi42t62wrhztezjxegfgxo3yu
P698PubMed publication ID20029392
P5875ResearchGate publication ID40759881

P2093author name stringR Levi
A Divanoglou
N Westgren
S Bjelak
P2860cites workThe management of neurogenic bladder and sexual dysfunction after spinal cord injuryQ34503184
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Medical complications during acute rehabilitation following spinal cord injury--current experience of the Model SystemsQ39522964
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Incidence of traumatic spinal cord injury in Thessaloniki, Greece and Stockholm, Sweden: a prospective population-based studyQ42617039
Spinal cord injury unitsQ43805786
Properties and outcomes of spinal rehabilitation units in four countriesQ43836750
Length of stay in hospital following spinal cord lesions in IsraelQ47201826
Spinal cord lesion management in Italy: a 2-year survey.Q47432750
Efficacy of specialist versus non-specialist management of spinal cord injury within the UK.Q53674541
Effect of bladder management on urological complications in spinal cord injured patientsQ73477212
Secondary conditions following spinal cord injury in a population-based sampleQ74204197
Complications following spinal cord injury: occurrence and risk factors in a longitudinal study during and after inpatient rehabilitationQ80429665
P433issue6
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P304page(s)470-476
P577publication date2009-12-22
P1433published inSpinal CordQ15752472
P1476titleMedical conditions and outcomes at 1 year after acute traumatic spinal cord injury in a Greek and a Swedish region: a prospective, population-based study
P478volume48