Carmelo D'Arrigo
Sapienza University of Rome
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Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1990
E. Ippolito; M. R. Moneta; Carmelo D'Arrigo
The results in twenty-four patients who had had a supracondylar osteotomy of the humerus to correct post-traumatic cubitus varus were reviewed after the patients had completed skeletal growth. The average age of the patients was 7.9 years at operation and thirty-one years at the time of follow-up. The average duration of follow-up was twenty-three years. According to our grading system, seven patients had a good; six, a fair; and eleven, a poor result. All but two of the nineteen patients in whom the humero-ulnar angle had been measured preoperatively lost correction that had been obtained at operation. No correlation was found between the quality of the result and either the age of the patient at operation or the amount of correction that had been obtained at operation. The correction that was obtained at operation was maintained in the two patients in whom the cubitus varus deformity had been caused by malunion of a supracondylar fracture. However, when the deformity followed either physeal injury or supracondylar fracture with damage to the physis secondary to the initial trauma, the correction was not maintained. At the most recent follow-up, three patients were symptomatic, and fourteen were dissatisfied with the cosmetic result because of the residual deformity of the elbow or the postoperative scar, or both. In spite of the partial recurrence of the deformity, which was sometimes severe, all but the three symptomatic patients had a very good functional result. Many of these patients worked at heavy manual labor.
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2006
Fabio Conteduca; Edoardo Monaco; Angelo De Carli; Carmelo D'Arrigo
BACKGROUND The outcome of revision anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction has only rarely been reported. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the results of revision anterior cruciate ligament surgery with use of an autogenous doubled semitendinosus and gracilis graft in association with an extra-articular procedure. METHODS Between 1997 and 2003, thirty patients underwent a repeat reconstruction of a previously reconstructed torn anterior cruciate ligament with use of a doubled semitendinosus and gracilis graft combined with an extra-articular reconstruction. Primary reconstruction had been done with an autogenous patellar tendon graft in twenty-six patients and with a prosthetic ligament in four patients; the average time from the primary reconstruction to the revision was five years. Functional outcomes, graft survival, and radiographic outcomes were evaluated at a mean of five years. A graft was considered to have failed when a revision was done or when the side-to-side difference on KT-1000 arthrometer testing was >5 mm and/or the pivot-shift test grade was greater than a trace. RESULTS One patient underwent another revision reconstruction because of graft failure at three years postoperatively. The mean International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) subjective knee score for the remaining twenty-nine patients was 84 +/- 12 points, and the mean Lysholm knee score was 90 +/- 10 points. The side-to-side difference as measured with the KT-1000 arthrometer with maximum manual force was <3 mm in twenty patients (of the twenty-eight who returned for follow-up), between 3 and 5 mm in six patients, and >5 mm in two patients. The result of the pivot shift examination was normal in fifteen patients, slightly positive in eleven patients, and positive in two patients. Twenty-five percent of the patients showed no radiographic signs of degenerative joint disease. CONCLUSIONS Revision anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with use of an autogenous doubled semitendinosus and gracilis graft combined with an extra-articular procedure provided satisfactory functional outcomes, with a failure rate of 10%.
Orthopedics | 2010
Edoardo Monaco; Barbara Maestri; Luca Labianca; Attilio Speranza; Matthew James Kelly; Carmelo D'Arrigo
In this study we evaluated the role of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and its secondary restraint in controlling knee stability using a navigation system. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the kinematics of the knee in different conditions of instability: ACL intact, after transection of the posterolateral (PL) bundle, after transection of the anteromedial (AM) bundle, and after lesion of the anterolateral femorotibial ligament (ALFTL). Anterior tibial translation and rotation were measured with a computer navigation system in 6 knees in whole fresh-frozen human cadavers by use of a manual maximum load. Anterior translation was evaluated at 30°, 60°, and 90° of flexion; rotation at 0°, 15°, 30°, 45°, 60°, and 90° of flexion. Cutting the PL bundle does not increase anterior translation and rotation of the knee. Cutting the AM bundle significantly increased the anteroposterior (AP) translation at 30° and 60° of flexion (P=.01), but does not increase rotation of the knee. Cutting the ALFTL increased anterior translation at 60° of flexion (P=.04) and rotation at 30°, 45°, and 60° of flexion (P=.03). The PL bundle does not affect anterior translation and rotation of the knee. The AM bundle is the primary restraint of the anterior translation but does not affect rotation of the knee. The lateral compartment becomes the primary restraint of rotation after ACL cut. The primary kinematic effect of an ACL injury is an increase in anterior tibial translation, but there is no significant change in maximum internal or external rotation. The lesion of the ALFTL increases tibial rotation and could be correlated to the pivot shift phenomenon.
Hip International | 2007
Attilio Speranza; Raffaele Iorio; M. Ferretti; Carmelo D'Arrigo
Minimally invasive surgery has become a trend over the last few years in all aspects of orthopaedic surgery, including total hip arthroplasty. So-called mini-incision techniques involve limiting the length of the skin incision to 10 cm with use of either an anterior, lateral or posterior approach. Between March 2004 and December 2005 one hundred consecutive unilateral total hip replacements were performed by the same senior surgeon in our institute. All patients were randomly assigned to study group (group A) or control group (group B). In group A (50 patients) the skin incision was 8 cm; in group B (50 patients) the skin incision was standard (about 12-14 cm). Patient demographic data, including sex, age, height, weight, BMI, diagnosis and preoperative Harris hip score were recorded. Other criteria evaluated included the perioperative and postoperative complications, the surgical time, the blood loss, the length of the incision, the acetabular and stem positions, the length of hospital stay, Harris Hip Score (HHS) and the WOMAC osteoarthritis index at six months. No significant differences were found between the groups with respect to the average surgical time, the acetabular and stem position, the length of hospital stay and the Harris Hip Score (HHS) and the WOMAC osteoarthritis index at six months. A significant lower blood loss was found in the mini-incision group. A higher percentage of peri-operative complications was recorded in Group A (two stupor of sciatic nerve and one fracture of the greater trochanter). On the basis of our experience we could speculate that minimally invasive surgery should be directed to the new surgical approach with muscle sparing, instead of a shorter skin incision using standard approaches.
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2007
Fabio Conteduca; Edoardo Monaco; Angelo De Carli; Carmelo D'Arrigo
BACKGROUND The outcome of revision anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction has only rarely been reported. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the results of revision anterior cruciate ligament surgery with use of an autogenous doubled semitendinosus and gracilis graft in association with an extra-articular procedure. METHODS Between 1997 and 2003, thirty patients underwent a repeat reconstruction of a previously reconstructed torn anterior cruciate ligament with use of a doubled semitendinosus and gracilis graft combined with an extra-articular reconstruction. Primary reconstruction had been done with an autogenous patellar tendon graft in twenty-six patients and with a prosthetic ligament in four patients; the average time from the primary reconstruction to the revision was five years. Functional outcomes, graft survival, and radiographic outcomes were evaluated at a mean of five years. A graft was considered to have failed when a revision was done or when the side-to-side difference on KT-1000 arthrometer testing was >5 mm and/or the pivot-shift test grade was greater than a trace. RESULTS One patient underwent another revision reconstruction because of graft failure at three years postoperatively. The mean International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) subjective knee score for the remaining twenty-nine patients was 84 +/- 12 points, and the mean Lysholm knee score was 90 +/- 10 points. The side-to-side difference as measured with the KT-1000 arthrometer with maximum manual force was <3 mm in twenty patients (of the twenty-eight who returned for follow-up), between 3 and 5 mm in six patients, and >5 mm in two patients. The result of the pivot shift examination was normal in fifteen patients, slightly positive in eleven patients, and positive in two patients. Twenty-five percent of the patients showed no radiographic signs of degenerative joint disease. CONCLUSIONS Revision anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with use of an autogenous doubled semitendinosus and gracilis graft combined with an extra-articular procedure provided satisfactory functional outcomes, with a failure rate of 10%.
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1990
E. Ippolito; M. R. Moneta; Carmelo D'Arrigo
Hip International | 2009
Carlo Alberto Buratti; Carmelo D'Arrigo; Giulio Guido; Francesca Lenzi; Giandomenico Logroscino; Giampiero Magliocchetti; Claudia Mannocci; Silvio Patella; Vittorio Patella; Vittorio Salvi; Attilio Speranza; Domenico Speciale; Antonio Spinarelli; Domenico Topa
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2017
Attilio Speranza; Raffaella Alonzo; S. De Santis; S. Frontini; Carmelo D'Arrigo
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2016
Alessandro Carcangiu; Carmelo D'Arrigo; Alberto Bonifazi; Stefania De Sanctis; Raffaella Alonzo; Andrea Setini
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2013
A. Ferrett; Carmelo D'Arrigo; E. MOonaco; B. Maestri; Fabio Conteduca