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Dive into the research topics where Eric T. Ricchetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric T. Ricchetti.


Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery | 2012

Scaffold devices for rotator cuff repair

Eric T. Ricchetti; Amit Aurora; Joseph P. Iannotti; Kathleen A. Derwin

Rotator cuff tears affect 40% or more of those aged older than 60 years, and repair failure rates of 20% to 70% remain a significant clinical challenge. Hence, there is a need for repair strategies that can augment the repair by mechanically reinforcing it, while at the same time biologically enhancing the intrinsic healing potential of the tendon. Tissue engineering strategies to improve rotator cuff repair healing include the use of scaffolds, growth factors, and cell seeding, or a combination of these approaches. Currently, scaffolds derived from mammalian extracellular matrix, synthetic polymers, and a combination thereof, have been cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and are marketed as medical devices for rotator cuff repair in humans. Despite the growing clinical use of scaffold devices for rotator cuff repair, there are numerous questions related to their indication, surgical application, safety, mechanism of action, and efficacy that remain to be clarified or addressed. This article reviews the current basic science and clinical understanding of commercially available synthetic and extracellular matrix scaffolds for rotator cuff repair. Our review will emphasize the host response and scaffold remodeling, mechanical and suture-retention properties, and preclinical and clinical studies on the use of these scaffolds for rotator cuff repair. We will discuss the implications of these data on the future directions for use of these scaffolds in tendon repair procedures.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2007

Occipitalization of the atlas in children. Morphologic classification, associations, and clinical relevance.

Purushottam A. Gholve; Harish S. Hosalkar; Eric T. Ricchetti; Avrum N. Pollock; John P. Dormans; Denis S. Drummond

BACKGROUND Occipitalization is defined as a congenital fusion of the atlas to the base of the occiput. We are not aware of any previous studies addressing the morphologic patterns of occipitalization or the implications of occipitalization in children. We present data on what we believe is the largest reported series of children with occipitalization studied with computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging, and we provide a description of their clinical characteristics. METHODS We retrospectively reviewed all cases of occipitalization in children included in our spine database. Patient charts and imaging studies were reviewed. A new morphologic classification of occipitalization was developed from the two-dimensional sagittal and coronal reformatted computed tomographic reconstructions and/or magnetic resonance images. The classification includes four patterns according to the anatomic site of occipitalization (Zones 1, 2, and 3 and a combination of those zones), and it was applied to this group of patients. Imaging studies were also reviewed for evidence of cervical instability and for other anomalies of the craniovertebral junction. RESULTS Thirty patients with occipitalization were identified. There were twenty-four boys and six girls with a mean age of 6.5 years. The morphologic categorization was Zone 1 (a fused anterior arch) in six patients, Zone 2 (fused lateral masses) in five, Zone 3 (a fused posterior arch) in four, and a combination of fused zones in fifteen. Seventeen patients (57%) had atlantoaxial instability, and eight of them had an associated C2-C3 fusion. Eleven patients (37%) had spinal canal encroachment, and five of them had clinical findings of myelopathy. The highest prevalence of spinal canal encroachment (63%) was noted in patients with occipitalization in Zone 2. CONCLUSIONS Occipitalization is associated with abnormalities that lead to narrowing of the space available for the spinal cord or brainstem. The risk of atlantoaxial instability developing is particularly high when there is an associated congenital C2-C3 fusion. Two-dimensional sagittal and coronal reformatted computed tomographic reconstructions and/or magnetic resonance images can help to establish the diagnosis and permit categorization of occipitalization in three zones, each of which may have a different prognostic implication.


Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery | 2012

Reinfection rates after 1-stage revision shoulder arthroplasty for patients with unexpected positive intraoperative cultures

Matthew J. Grosso; Vani J. Sabesan; Jason C. Ho; Eric T. Ricchetti; Joseph P. Iannotti

BACKGROUND Recent studies have detailed the significance of indolent infections in revision shoulder arthroplasty, but little information is available to guide treatment strategies regarding patients with positive cultures without overt signs of infection. The primary purpose of this study was to determine recurrence rates of infection for patients undergoing revision shoulder arthroplasty who were not treated for infection but had positive intraoperative cultures. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the results of 17 patients undergoing revision of a failed shoulder joint replacement with at least 1 positive intraoperative culture who were not treated for infection because of limited signs of infection before or at the time of revision surgery. These patients underwent 1-stage revision surgery without an extended intravenous antibiotic regimen. RESULTS The recurrence rate of infection for the 17 patients was 5.9%. The most common pathogen cultured at revision surgery was Propionibacterium acnes (10 of 17 [56%]), followed by coagulase-negative Staphylococcus species (6 of 17 [35%]). CONCLUSION We found that low-virulence and clinically unexpected infections treated with 1-stage revision have a low risk for recurrent infection. This study suggests that intensive antimicrobial treatment strategies may not be necessary to reduce recurrent infections in patients with positive intraoperative cultures, without overt clinical signs of infection before or during the revision surgery.


Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery | 2010

Use of locking plates in the treatment of proximal humerus fractures

Eric T. Ricchetti; William J. Warrender; Joseph A. Abboud

BACKGROUND/HYPOTHESIS Open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) using locked plating has demonstrated promise in the treatment of displaced proximal humerus fractures. The purpose of this article is to describe the surgical technique and to report early clinical results with this technique. METHODS Important surgical principles to follow include adequate use of locking screws in the humeral head, bone graft or bone graft substitutes when needed, rotator cuff sutures to assist with reduction and augment fixation, and sufficient use of intraoperative fluoroscopic imaging. A review was performed to evaluate early outcomes of ORIF with proximal humerus locking plates. All cases were fixed with the described surgical technique. Postoperative assessment included radiographic imaging, PENN/ASES Shoulder Scores, range-of-motion (ROM), and complications. RESULTS Fifty-two patients (54 shoulders) had minimum 6-month follow-up (13-month mean follow-up). Mean age was 65.5 years. Postoperatively, mean active forward elevation was 130.1 degrees, and mean active external rotation was 27.7 degrees. Mean post-op PENN shoulder score was 68.9 and mean post-op ASES score was 70.8. There were 11 (20.4%) complications in 10 (18.5%) shoulders after treatment with a proximal humerus locking plate. Three complications were classified as minor (5.6%), 8 as major (14.8%). Two shoulders (3.7%) required reoperation to address the complications. CONCLUSION The use of locking plates in the treatment of displaced proximal humerus fractures is becoming more widespread. With precise knowledge of and experience with the surgical technique, locked plating can be performed safely with good results. However, surgeons should be aware that complications can arise.


Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery | 2015

α-Defensin as a predictor of periprosthetic shoulder infection

Salvatore J. Frangiamore; Anas Saleh; Matthew J. Grosso; Mario Farias Kovac; Carlos A. Higuera; Joseph P. Iannotti; Eric T. Ricchetti

BACKGROUND Diagnosis of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in revision shoulder arthroplasty can be challenging because of the indolent nature of the common offending organisms. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic utility of synovial fluid α-defensin levels in identifying PJI of the shoulder. METHODS Thirty patients evaluated for painful shoulder arthroplasty were prospectively enrolled and underwent revision surgery (n = 33 cases). Cases were categorized into infection (n = 11) and no-infection (n = 22) groups on the basis of preoperative and intraoperative findings. Synovial fluid was obtained from preoperative aspirations or intraoperative aspiration before arthrotomy. α-Defensin was tested by the Synovasure (CD Diagnostics, Wynnewood, PA, USA) test for joint infection. Synovial fluid was also obtained intraoperatively from a control group undergoing arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (n = 16) for baseline data on normal α-defensin levels in the shoulder. A receiver operating characteristic curve was used to determine the diagnostic utility of synovial fluid α-defensin. RESULTS Synovial α-defensin had an area under the curve, sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative likelihood ratios of 0.78, 63%, 95%, 12.1, and 0.38, respectively. There was a significant difference in α-defensin levels between the infection (median, 3.2 S/CO [signal to cutoff ratio]) and no-infection groups (median, 0.21 S/CO; P = .006). Synovial α-defensin was elevated in the presence of a culture positive for Propionibacterium acnes (median, 1.33 S/CO; P = .03) and showed moderate correlation with the number of positive cultures. CONCLUSION Synovial fluid α-defensin was more effective than current diagnostic testing in predicting positive cultures and may be an effective adjunct in the workup of shoulder PJI.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2014

Sensitivity of Frozen Section Histology for Identifying Propionibacterium acnes Infections in Revision Shoulder Arthroplasty

Matthew J. Grosso; Salvatore J. Frangiamore; Eric T. Ricchetti; Thomas W. Bauer; Joseph P. Iannotti

BACKGROUND Propionibacterium acnes is a clinically relevant pathogen with total shoulder arthroplasty. The purpose of this study was to determine the sensitivity of frozen section histology in identifying patients with Propionibacterium acnes infection during revision total shoulder arthroplasty and investigate various diagnostic thresholds of acute inflammation that may improve frozen section performance. METHODS We reviewed the results of forty-five patients who underwent revision total shoulder arthroplasty. Patients were divided into the non-infection group (n = 15), the Propionibacterium acnes infection group (n = 18), and the other infection group (n = 12). Routine preoperative testing was performed and intraoperative tissue culture and frozen section histology were collected for each patient. The histologic diagnosis was determined by one pathologist for each of the four different thresholds. The absolute maximum polymorphonuclear leukocyte concentration was used to construct a receiver operating characteristics curve to determine a new potential optimal threshold. RESULTS Using the current thresholds for grading frozen section histology, the sensitivity was lower for the Propionibacterium acnes infection group (50%) compared with the other infection group (67%). The specificity of frozen section was 100%. Using a receiver operating characteristics curve, an optimized threshold was found at a total of ten polymorphonuclear leukocytes in five high-power fields (400×). Using this threshold, the sensitivity of frozen section for Propionibacterium acnes was increased to 72%, and the specificity remained at 100%. CONCLUSIONS Using current histopathology grading systems, frozen sections were specific but showed low sensitivity with respect to the Propionibacterium acnes infection. A new threshold value of a total of ten or more polymorphonuclear leukocytes in five high-power fields may increase the sensitivity of frozen section, with minimal impact on specificity.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2009

Rotator Cuff Tendon Strain Correlates with Tear Propagation

Nelly Andarawis-Puri; Eric T. Ricchetti; Louis J. Soslowsky

Rotator cuff tears are a common tendon injury often requiring surgical treatment. Understanding the relationships between tear size, tendon loading, and tendon strain adjacent to a rotator cuff tear can provide important insights into predicting the likelihood of propagation to larger tears which would influence clinical treatment. Previous studies assume that an increase in strain correlates with an increase in risk of tear propagation. However, these studies did not explicitly investigate these important relationships. Therefore, the objective of this study was to quantify two-dimensional strain fields adjacent to a rotator cuff tendon tear under loading to failure and to assess the relationship between tendon strain and tear size. Sheep infraspinatus tendons were used to evaluate the effect of tear size on principal strains in the region adjacent to the tear. The relationship between strain, tear propagation, and the direction of tear propagation was quantified. Results showed that principal strains linearly correlated with tear propagation and that tear propagation began at strains as low as 1.7%. In addition, tears propagated in the direction of highest maximum and lowest minimum principal strain. Finally, maximum and minimum principal strains were higher and lower, respectively, adjacent to larger tears compared to smaller tears. Findings from this study validate the use of local strain adjacent to a rotator cuff tear as an indicator of the risk and direction of tear propagation.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2013

Failure With Continuity in Rotator Cuff Repair “Healing”

Jesse A. McCarron; Kathleen A. Derwin; Michael J. Bey; Joshua M. Polster; Jean Schils; Eric T. Ricchetti; Joseph P. Iannotti

Background: Ten to seventy percent of rotator cuff repairs form a recurrent defect after surgery. The relationship between retraction of the repaired tendon and formation of a recurrent defect is not well defined. Purpose/Hypotheses: To measure the prevalence, timing, and magnitude of tendon retraction after rotator cuff repair and correlate these outcomes with formation of a full-thickness recurrent tendon defect on magnetic resonance imaging, as well as clinical outcomes. We hypothesized that (1) tendon retraction is a common phenomenon, although not always associated with a recurrent defect; (2) formation of a recurrent tendon defect correlates with the timing of tendon retraction; and (3) clinical outcome correlates with the magnitude of tendon retraction at 52 weeks and the formation of a recurrent tendon defect. Study Design: Case series; Level of evidence, 4. Methods: Fourteen patients underwent arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. Tantalum markers placed within the repaired tendons were used to assess tendon retraction by computed tomography scan at 6, 12, 26, and 52 weeks after operation. Magnetic resonance imaging was performed to assess for recurrent tendon defects. Shoulder function was evaluated using the Penn score, visual analog scale (VAS) score for pain, and isometric scapular-plane abduction strength. Results: All rotator cuff repairs retracted away from their position of initial fixation during the first year after surgery (mean [standard deviation], 16.1 [5.3] mm; range, 5.7-23.2 mm), yet only 30% of patients formed a recurrent defect. Patients who formed a recurrent defect tended to have more tendon retraction during the first 6 weeks after surgery (9.7 [6.0] mm) than those who did not form a defect (4.1 [2.2] mm) (P = .08), but the total magnitude of tendon retraction was not significantly different between patient groups at 52 weeks. There was no significant correlation between the magnitude of tendon retraction and the Penn score (r = 0.01, P = .97) or normalized scapular abduction strength (r = −0.21, P = .58). However, patients who formed a recurrent defect tended to have lower Penn scores at 52 weeks (P = .1). Conclusion: Early tendon retraction, but not the total magnitude, correlates with formation of a recurrent tendon defect and worse clinical outcomes. “Failure with continuity” (tendon retraction without a recurrent defect) appears to be a common phenomenon after rotator cuff repair. These data suggest that repairs should be protected in the early postoperative period and repair strategies should endeavor to mechanically and biologically augment the repair during this critical early period.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2014

Three-dimensional preoperative planning software and a novel information transfer technology improve glenoid component positioning.

Joseph P. Iannotti; Justin Baker; Eric Rodriguez; John J. Brems; Eric T. Ricchetti; Mena Mesiha; Jason A. Bryan

BACKGROUND We hypothesized that a novel surgical method, in which three-dimensional (3-D) preoperative planning software is generated to create a patient-specific surgical model that is used with a reusable and adjustable tool, could substantially improve the positioning accuracy of the glenoid guide pin used in total shoulder arthroplasty. We tested this method using bone models from patients with shoulder pathology and compared the results with those achieved using surgical methods representing the current standard of care. METHODS Three surgeons with a variety of surgical experience placed a guide pin in nine bone models from patients with a variety of glenohumeral arthritis severity using (1) standard instrumentation alone, (2) standard instrumentation and 3-D preoperative surgical planning, and (3) the reusable transfer device and 3-D preoperative surgical planning. A postoperative 3-D computed tomography scan of the bone model was made and registered to the preoperative plan, and the differences between the actual and planned pin locations and trajectories were measured. RESULTS Use of the standard instrumentation combined with 3-D preoperative planning software improved guide pin positioning compared with standard instrumentation and preoperative planning using 2-D imaging. The accuracy of pin positioning increased by 4.5° ± 1.0° in version (p < 0.001), 3.3° ± 1.3° in inclination (p = 0.013), and 0.4 ± 0.2 mm in location (p = 0.042). Use of the adjustable and reusable device and the 3-D software improved pin positioning by a further 3.7° ± 0.9° in version, 8.1° ± 1.2° in inclination, and 1.2 ± 0.2 mm in location (p < 0.001 for all) compared with standard instrumentation and the 3-D software; the improvement compared with use of standard instrumentation with 2-D imaging was 8.2° ± 0.9° in version, 11.4° ± 1.2° in inclination, and 1.7 ± 0.2 mm in location (p < 0.001 for all). CONCLUSIONS Use of 3-D preoperative planning and use of the patient-specific bone model and transfer device both improved the positioning accuracy of the pin used to guide placement of the glenoid component in total shoulder arthroplasty. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Proper positioning of the glenoid component would be expected to improve the function and durability of the joint replacement.


Journal of The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons | 2006

Elbow arthroscopy: basic setup and portal placement.

Joseph A. Abboud; Eric T. Ricchetti; Fotios P. Tjoumakaris; Matthew L. Ramsey

Since the first reports of elbow arthroscopy in the American literature,1,2 advances in arthroscopic technique and equipment have made elbow arthroscopy an effective and safe method for the diagnosis and treatment of a variety of elbow ailments.3 With elbow arthroscopy becoming more common, precise knowledge of the neurovascular anatomy, preferred arthroscopic portals, and considered indications for definitive arthroscopic procedures is required to maximize the success rate and improve the clinical outcome.

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Joseph A. Abboud

Thomas Jefferson University

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Matthew L. Ramsey

Thomas Jefferson University

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Bong Jae Jun

University of California

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