Mark R. Guthrie
University of Washington
9 Papers
201 Citations
Mark R. Guthrie is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Occupational therapy. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications.
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Papers
Clinical Decision Making by Experienced and Inexperienced Pediatric Physical Therapists for Children With Diplegic Cerebral Palsy
TL;DR: Clinical decision-making processes of three experienced therapists and three inexperienced therapists were assessed as they worked with 18 children with diplegia, and four characteristics of clinical decision making were identified.
Six-minute walk by people with chronic renal failure. Assessment of effort by perceived exertion.
Sally S. Fitts,Mark R. Guthrie +1 more
TL;DR: The study demonstrates that, although perceived exertion ratings are intended for use in incremental exercise testing, they are also valuable for assessing consistency v change in the effort of individual participants in single-intensity testing, such as a self-paced walk.
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Exercise Coaching and Rehabilitation Counseling Improve Quality of Life for Predialysis and Dialysis Patients
TL;DR: Quality of life was stable or improved in PR, but declined in PC; PR benefited more than DR; Rehabilitation services are more beneficial before than after patients stabilize on dialysis, and quality of life monitoring should continue indefinitely.
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Validity of Clinical Measures of Shoulder Subluxation in Adults With Poststroke Hemiplegia
TL;DR: Although detection was best with palpation, the likely inability to determine clinical overcorrecting of subluxation makes use of palpation alone suspect, and improved techniques of arm length measurement may provide a solution to this problem.
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•Journal Article
Effects of erythropoietin on strength and functional status of patients on hemodialysis
TL;DR: Significant increases in strength, endurance, and functional status of 15 anemic hemodialysis patients was quantified and, when reversed with epoetin therapy, results in significantly improved muscle function and endurance.
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