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Dive into the research topics where Alessandra Berton is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alessandra Berton.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2012

The FIFA 11+ Program Is Effective in Preventing Injuries in Elite Male Basketball Players A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Mattia Loppini; Alessandra Berton; Andrea Marinozzi; Nicola Maffulli; V. Denaro

Background: Recently, structured training programs for sports injury prevention (“The 11” and “The 11+”) have been validated in soccer. The FIFA 11+ program has not been evaluated in basketball. Hypothesis: The FIFA 11+ program is effective in reducing the rates of injury in male basketball players. Study Design: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. Methods: The authors randomized 11 teams of the same club. Seven teams were allocated to the intervention group (80 players; mean [SD] age 13.5 [2.3] years), and 4 teams were allocated to the control group (41 players; mean [SD] age 15.2 [4.6] years). The authors conducted an injury surveillance program during a 9-month season. The primary outcome was any injury to the athletes. The secondary outcome was any injury to the lower extremity (foot, ankle, lower leg, knee, thigh, groin, and hip). They included an analysis of the type of exposure (match or training), injury location in the body, and type of injury (acute or overuse). Results: During the 9-month season, 23 (19%) of the 121 players included in the study sustained a total of 31 injuries (14 in the intervention group and 17 in the control group). In the intervention group, injury rates per 1000 athlete-exposures were lower than those in the control group, with statistical significance, for overall injuries (0.95 vs 2.16; P = .0004), training injuries (0.14 vs 0.76; P = .007), lower extremity injuries (0.68 vs 1.4; P = .022), acute injuries (0.61 vs 1.91; P < .0001), and severe injuries (0 vs 0.51; P = .004). The intervention group also had statistically significant lower injury rates for trunk (0.07 vs 0.51; P = .013), leg (0 vs 0.38; P = .007), and hip and groin (0 vs 0.25; P = .023) compared with the control group. There was no statistically significant difference in match injuries, knee injuries, ankle injuries, and overuse injuries between 2 groups. The most frequent acute injury diagnoses were ligament sprains (0.41 and 0.38 in the intervention and control groups, respectively; P < .006) and contractures (0.76 and 0.07 in the control and intervention groups, respectively; P < .003). Conclusion: The FIFA 11+ warm-up program is effective in reducing the rates of injuries in elite male basketball players.


Sports Medicine and Arthroscopy Review | 2011

Histopathology of Rotator Cuff Tears

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Alessandra Berton; Wasim S. Khan; Nicola Maffulli

The pathogenesis of rotator cuff tears is multifactorial. Tendon abnormalities of the rotator cuff include alteration of collagen fiber structure, tenocytes, cellularity, and vascularity. Ruptured tendons show marked collagen degeneration and disordered arrangement of collagen fibers. Fibroblast population decreases as the size of the tear in the rotator cuff increases. The larger fibroblast population seen in the smaller tears is also actively proliferating and is part of an active reparative process. Inflammatory cell infiltrate correlates inversely to rotator cuff tear size in the torn supraspinatus tendon samples, with larger tears showing a marked reduction in all cell types. As tear size increase, there is also a progressive decrease in the number of blood vessels. Whether rotator cuff tear heals spontaneously is an important pathologic and clinical question. Histologic changes indicative of repair and inflammation lead to consider biological options in addition to biomechanical treatment of the rotator cuff tears.


Stem Cells International | 2012

Stem Cells and Gene Therapy for Cartilage Repair

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Stefano Petrillo; Edoardo Franceschetti; Alessandra Berton; Nicola Maffulli; Vincenzo Denaro

Cartilage defects represent a common problem in orthopaedic practice. Predisposing factors include traumas, inflammatory conditions, and biomechanics alterations. Conservative management of cartilage defects often fails, and patients with this lesions may need surgical intervention. Several treatment strategies have been proposed, although only surgery has been proved to be predictably effective. Usually, in focal cartilage defects without a stable fibrocartilaginous repair tissue formed, surgeons try to promote a natural fibrocartilaginous response by using marrow stimulating techniques, such as microfracture, abrasion arthroplasty, and Pridie drilling, with the aim of reducing swelling and pain and improving joint function of the patients. These procedures have demonstrated to be clinically useful and are usually considered as first-line treatment for focal cartilage defects. However, fibrocartilage presents inferior mechanical and biochemical properties compared to normal hyaline articular cartilage, characterized by poor organization, significant amounts of collagen type I, and an increased susceptibility to injury, which ultimately leads to premature osteoarthritis (OA). Therefore, the aim of future therapeutic strategies for articular cartilage regeneration is to obtain a hyaline-like cartilage repair tissue by transplantation of tissues or cells. Further studies are required to clarify the role of gene therapy and mesenchimal stem cells for management of cartilage lesions.


Medicine and sport science | 2012

Epidemiology, genetics and biological factors of rotator cuff tears.

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Alessandra Berton; Nicola Papapietro; Nicola Maffulli; Vincenzo Denaro

Rotator cuff disease is among the most common musculoskeletal disorders with high direct and indirect costs in industrialized countries. Not all rotator cuff tears are symptomatic. Genetics has recently been investigated as a factor involved in the pathogenesis of rotator cuff pathology. Genetic factors seem to be involved in symptom presentation and tear progression. As rotator cuff disease is multifactorial, no single gene is directly involved in the pathology. Phenotypic expression of genetic susceptibility manifests at the level of ultrastructure of the tendon. Predisposing genes may also operate through apoptosis and regenerative capacity. Studies on cellular and molecular biology are more numerous, but still incomplete, and recently have focussed on the role of apoptosis in tendinopathy, analyzing its key mediators and cellular changes. Oxidative stress is responsible for reduction of collagen synthesis. Biological investigations have identified recently new risk factors. Preliminary reports introduced the possible role of glucose as a risk factor for rotator cuff tear. Further studies are required to fully clarify the genetic and biological factors involved in rotator cuff tears.


Current Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2012

Stem Cells From Umbilical Cord and Placenta for Musculoskeletal Tissue Engineering

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Mattia Loppini; Alessandra Berton; Luca La Verde; Wasim S. Khan; Vincenzo Denaro

Mesenchymal stem cells isolated from amnion/amniotic fluid, umbilical cord blood, placental tissue, umbilical cord vein and the Whartons Jelly are promising candidates for musculoskeletal tissue engineering of bone and cartilage tissues. The extracorporeal nature of this source avoids the ethical concerns that plague the isolation of embryonic stem cells. Moreover, the harvesting does not require the invasive and discomfort extraction procedures as well as patient risks that attend adult stem cell isolation. Current preclinical studies support the application of these cell-based therapies for the regeneration of musculoskeletal tissues. We performed a review of the literature to focus on actual knowledge and the future perspectives of the stem cells deriving from umbilical cord and placenta for musculoskeletal tissue engineering.


Sports Medicine and Arthroscopy Review | 2011

Clinical tests for the diagnosis of rotator cuff disease.

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Alessandra Berton; Philip Michael Ahrens; Nicola Maffulli

Several tests have been described to examine the shoulder. However, there is a lack of consensus on clinical assessment of patients with shoulder pain and suspected rotator cuff pathology. This review reports the diagnostic accuracy of clinical tests for rotator cuff pathology. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy of 21 clinical tests for rotator cuff pathology are reported from the available literature. Twenty studies investigated supraspinatus pathology, 12 infraspinatus pathology, and 9 subscapularis pathology. Most tests for rotator cuff pathology are inaccurate, and the recent literature shows that there is insufficient evidence to recommend 1 clinical test over another for diagnosis of rotator cuff pathology. Poor diagnostic accuracy of clinical tests for rotator cuff pathology may be related to the close relationships of structures in the shoulder, to a lack of understanding of anatomical basis of the tests, or to their lack of reproducibility.


Sports Medicine and Arthroscopy Review | 2011

Biological factors in the pathogenesis of rotator cuff tears.

Nicola Maffulli; Umile Giuseppe Longo; Alessandra Berton; Mattia Loppini

Rotator cuff tears are common, and lead to shoulder pain and functional impairment. Despite their frequency and related disability, etiology and pathogenesis are still debated. Multiple factors contribute to tears of the rotator cuff. Extrinsic factors are anatomic variables, such as acromial morphologic characteristics, os acromiale, and acromial spurs that compress the rotator cuff by bony impingement or direct pressure from the surrounding soft tissue. Intrinsic factors arise from the tendon itself, because of tensile overload, aging, microvascular supply, traumatisms, or degeneration. Little information is available from a cellular and molecular point of view. We reviewed the biological factors involved in the pathogenesis of rotator cuff tears. Understanding the mechanism of rotator cuff pathology would facilitate the rationale for therapeutic interventions, by guiding the design, selection, and implementation of treatment strategies such as biologic modulation and preventive measures.


Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 2012

Instruments to assess patients with rotator cuff pathology: a systematic review of measurement properties

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Daniël B.F. Saris; Rudolf W. Poolman; Alessandra Berton; Vincenzo Denaro

PurposeThe aims of this study were to obtain an overview of the methodological quality of studies on the measurement properties of rotator cuff questionnaires and to describe how well various aspects of the design and statistical analyses of studies on measurement properties are performed.MethodsA systematic review of published studies on the measurement properties of rotator cuff questionnaires was performed. Two investigators independently rated the quality of the studies using the Consensus-based Standards for the selection of health Measurement Instruments checklist. This checklist was developed in an international Delphi consensus study.ResultsSixteen studies were included, in which two measurement instruments were evaluated, namely the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index and the Rotator Cuff Quality-of-Life Measure. The methodological quality of the included studies was adequate on some properties (construct validity, reliability, responsiveness, internal consistency, and translation) but need to be improved on other aspects. The most important methodological aspects that need to be developed are as follows: measurement error, content validity, structural validity, cross-cultural validity, criterion validity, and interpretability.ConclusionConsidering the importance of adequate measurement properties, it is concluded that, in the field of rotator cuff pathology, there is room for improvement in the methodological quality of studies measurement properties.Level of evidenceII.


Sports Medicine and Arthroscopy Review | 2011

Biological resurfacing for early osteoarthritis of the shoulder.

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Alessandra Berton; Susan Alexander; Nicola Maffulli; Andrew L. Wallace; Vincenzo Denaro

Young patients with degenerative shoulder disease are a therapeutic challenge. To try to delay a shoulder arthroplasty, biological interpositional arthroplasty has been proposed to provide a biologically active bearing surface that could eventually results in the formation of fibrocartilage, fibrous tissue, or hyaline cartilage. Anterior capsule, autogenous fascia lata, Achilles tendon allograft, lateral meniscus allograft, human dermis, and porcine small intestine submucosa have been used as interposition material, either alone or in combination with a hemiarthroplasty or humeral resurfacing procedure. Some investigators have reported favorable long-term results, although others have found this procedure unreliable. Several variables are unknown at present, such as the best biological resurfacing device, healing potential, possible antigenic responses, optimal fixation technique or position, aftercare restrictions. Further prospective studies with long follow-up are necessary to provide data that will help to define the role of biological glenoid resurfacing in young patients with glenohumeral arthritis.


Medicine and sport science | 2012

Biomechanics of the Rotator Cuff: European Perspective

Umile Giuseppe Longo; Alessandra Berton; Nicola Papapietro; Nicola Maffulli; Vincenzo Denaro

The rotator cuff has an important role in the stability and function of the glenohumeral joint. To understand the biomechanical proprieties of the rotator cuff, it is essential to understand the pathogenesis and effects of rotator cuff tears. The rotator cuff provides a stabilizing effect to the shoulder, because of compression of the humeral head against the glenoid cavity. The wide range of motion of the shoulder is allowed by the variety of rotational moments of the cuff muscles. Rotator cuff muscles action must be precisely coordinated to obtain the desired movement. Rotator cuff tendons are subjected to complex tension loads. The rotator cuff is also subjected to compressive loads. Upwardly directed humeral load squeezes the cuff between the humeral head and the coracoacromial arch. Extrinsic factors have always been considered among causes of cuff tears. However, evidence shows that acromial impingement is not the primary cause of rotator cuff tears. Tears of the rotator cuff change load distribution and determine a pattern that induces tear progression and extension. Progressive tears of the rotator cuff compromise glenohumeral stability and determine superior translation of the humeral head.

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Umile Giuseppe Longo

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Vincenzo Denaro

Sapienza University of Rome

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Nicola Maffulli

Queen Mary University of London

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Mattia Loppini

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Giacomo Rizzello

Sapienza University of Rome

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Filippo Spiezia

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Andrea Marinozzi

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Nicola Papapietro

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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