Heda hamzatova biography definition
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Orthopaedics – Anders Enocsons research group
Trauma
Responsible Anders Enocson
- Epidemiology and mortality of pelvic fractures
- Bleeding in pelvic fractures
- Arthroplasty for acetabular fractures
- Clinical and radiological outcome of pelvic fractures
- 3D computer tomography (CT) with motion analysis (CTMA) of pelvic fractures
- National epidemiology of trauma patients
- Artificial intelligence (AI)/machine learning analysis of trauma patients
- Computer tomography (CT) analysis of fracture healing
- Epidemiology and mortality of hip and femoral fractures
- Epidemiology and outcome of open tibial fractures
- Development of a clinical CT-based method for assessment of SI-joint instability
- Surgical treatment of chronic and acute acromioclavicular dislocations
- Validation of the Rockwood radiological classification for acromioclavicular dislocations
- A machine learning model for analysis of risk factors for mortality in hip fracture patients
- D-vitamin deficiency and its effect on fracture healing
- Muscle mass and tendon function after ankle fractures
- Clinical function, osteoporosis and sarcopenia 10 years after a femoral neck fracture in patients younger than 70 years
Arthroplasty
- Mortality and patient reported outcome after acute deep infection after primary total hip rep
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Armenian revolutionary songs
Armenian revolutionary songs[a] are patriotic songs that promote Armenianpatriotism. The origins of these songs lay largely in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when Armenian political parties were established to struggle for the political and civil rights of Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire.
History
[edit]The Armenian revolutionary movement, initially led by the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party (est. ) and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (est. ), took place in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[1] This was caused by years of oppression from the Ottoman Empire, especially under the rule of sultan Abdul Hamid II. This was the period when Armenians began demanding their most basic rights and defending Armenian towns from Ottoman oppression. Certain armed Armenian patriotic groups formed to fight the Turkish oppression and defend Armenian towns from Kurdish brigands. These volunteer fighters were called fedayees. In some instances, they were successful in defending Armenian locals, earning them popular support and elevating them to the status of heroes. This environment was thus ideal for the development of Armenian patriotic songs to support these freedom fighters.[2