Owens, J. S., Jimenez, A. E., Lee, M. S., Hawkins, G. C., Maldonado, D. R. & Domb, B. G. (2022). Basketball players undergoing primary hip arthroscopy exhibit higher grades of acetabular cartilage damage but achieve favorable midterm outcomes and return to sports rates comparable with a propensity-matched group of other cutting sports athlete. The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 50 (7), 1909-1918. Zugriff am 02.11.2022 unter https://doi.org/10.1177/03635465221092762
APA-Zitierstil (7. Ausg.)Owens, J. S., Jimenez, A. E., Lee, M. S., Hawkins, G. C., Maldonado, D. R., & Domb, B. G. (2022). Basketball players undergoing primary hip arthroscopy exhibit higher grades of acetabular cartilage damage but achieve favorable midterm outcomes and return to sports rates comparable with a propensity-matched group of other cutting sports athlete. The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 50(7), 1909-1918.
Chicago-Zitierstil (17. Ausg.)Owens, J. S., A. E. Jimenez, M. S. Lee, G. C. Hawkins, D. R. Maldonado, und B. G. Domb. "Basketball Players Undergoing Primary Hip Arthroscopy Exhibit Higher Grades of Acetabular Cartilage Damage but Achieve Favorable Midterm Outcomes and Return to Sports Rates Comparable with a Propensity-matched Group of Other Cutting Sports Athlete." The American Journal of Sports Medicine 50, no. 7 (2022): 1909-1918.
MLA-Zitierstil (9. Ausg.)Owens, J. S., et al. "Basketball Players Undergoing Primary Hip Arthroscopy Exhibit Higher Grades of Acetabular Cartilage Damage but Achieve Favorable Midterm Outcomes and Return to Sports Rates Comparable with a Propensity-matched Group of Other Cutting Sports Athlete." The American Journal of Sports Medicine, vol. 50, no. 7, 2022, pp. 1909-1918.