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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppe M. Peretti is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppe M. Peretti.


Annals of Plastic Surgery | 2001

A biomechanical analysis of an engineered cell-scaffold implant for cartilage repair.

Giuseppe M. Peretti; Mark A. Randolph; Victor Zaporojan; Lawrence J. Bonassar; Jian-Wei Xu; Jonathan C. Fellers; Michael J. Yaremchuk; John A. Persing

This study evaluated the biomechanical and physical properties of newly formed cartilage engineered from isolated chondrocytes in combination with matrix components. Four groups of constructs were studied. Group A consisted of lyophilized articular cartilage chips mixed with a cell-fibrinogen solution and thrombin to obtain constructs made of fibrin glue, chondrocytes, and cartilage chips. Group B constructs were prepared using fibrin glue and cartilage chips without cells. Group C contained chondrocytes in fibrin glue without chips, and group D comprised constructs of fibrin glue alone. Specimens were implanted in the subcutaneous tissue of nude mice for 9 weeks. At necropsy the specimens were examined grossly, physically, biomechanically, and histologically. The original, preimplantation mass of the constructs was retained only in experimental group A. Histological analysis of specimens in experimental groups A and C demonstrated the presence of newly formed cartilaginous matrix, whereas only fibrotic tissue was observed in control groups B and D. Biomechanical analysis demonstrated higher mean values of equilibrium modulus in the experimental samples of group A with respect to all control groups. This study demonstrated that adding lyophilized cartilage chips to a fibrin glue-engineered cartilage construct maintains the biomechanical properties and the original mass after medium-/long-term in vivo transplantation.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2014

The Benefit of Synthetic Versus Biological Patch Augmentation in the Repair of Posterosuperior Massive Rotator Cuff Tears A 3-Year Follow-up Study

Pietro Ciampi; Celeste Scotti; Alessandro Nonis; Matteo Vitali; Clelia Di Serio; Giuseppe M. Peretti; Gianfranco Fraschini

Background: Rotator cuff repair typically results in a satisfactory, although variable, clinical outcome. However, anatomic failure of the repaired tendon often occurs. Hypothesis: Patch augmentation can improve the results of open rotator cuff repair by supporting the healing process, protecting the suture, and reducing friction in the subacromial space. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: A total of 152 patients with a posterosuperior massive rotator cuff tear were treated by open repair only (control group; n = 51; mean age, 67.06 ± 4.42 years), open repair together with collagen patch augmentation (collagen group; n = 49; mean age, 66.53 ± 5.17 years), or open repair together with polypropylene patch augmentation (polypropylene group; n = 52; mean age, 66.17 ± 5.44 years) and were retrospectively studied. Patients were evaluated preoperatively and after 36 months with a visual analog scale (VAS) and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) shoulder rating scale and by measuring elevation of the scapular plane and strength with a dynamometer. The VAS and UCLA scores were also obtained 2 months postoperatively. Tendon integrity was assessed after 1 year by ultrasound. Patients were homogeneous as per the preoperative assessment. Results: After 2 months, results (mean ± standard deviation) for the control, collagen, and polypropylene groups, respectively, were as follows: VAS scores were 6.96 ± 1.11, 6.46 ± 1.02, and 4.92 ± 0.90, while UCLA scores were 11.29 ± 1.46, 11.40 ± 1.51, and 19.15 ± 1.99. After 36 months, the mean scores for the respective groups were 3.66 ± 1.05, 4.06 ± 1.02, and 3.28 ± 1.10 for the VAS and 14.88 ± 1.98, 14.69 ± 1.99, and 24.61 ± 3.22 for the UCLA scale. In addition, after 36 months, elevation on the scapular plane was 140.68° ± 9.84°, 140.61° ± 12.48°, and 174.71° ± 8.18°, and abduction strength was 8.73 ± 0.54 kg, 9.03 ± 0.60 kg, and 13.79 ± 0.64 kg for the control, collagen, and polypropylene groups, respectively. The retear rate after 12 months was 41% (21/51) for the control group, 51% (25/49) for the collagen group, and 17% (9/52) for the polypropylene group. In particular, the reduced 12-month retear rate and the increased UCLA scores, abduction strength, and elevation at 3-year follow-up were statistically significant for patients treated with a polypropylene patch compared with those treated with repair only or with a collagen patch. Conclusion: Polypropylene patch augmentation of rotator cuff repair was demonstrated to significantly improve the 36-month outcome in terms of function, strength, and retear rate.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2003

Heterotopic Ossification Around the Elbow Following Burns in Children: Results After Excision

Alok Gaur; Marc Sinclair; Enzo Caruso; Giuseppe M. Peretti; David J. Zaleske

BACKGROUND Major burn injuries close to joints alter the function of the musculoskeletal system through tissue loss and limitation of joint motion. In children with involvement of the hand, wrist, and forearm, restriction of elbow motion secondary to heterotopic ossification following a burn injury severely limits the function of the upper extremity. The purpose of this study was to review elbow function following excision of heterotopic ossification around the elbow in children. METHODS Eight children (ten elbows) from a population of 3245 consecutive patients who were admitted to our pediatric burn center were found to have severe heterotopic ossification of the elbow, leading to an inability to reach the mouth for feeding and the head and the perineum for self-care. Excision of the heterotopic ossification was undertaken if the patient had this limitation of function and if movement was restricted to a total arc of motion of <50 degrees. Pain was not an indication for the operation. The procedure was performed at an average of 17.3 months following the injury. RESULTS Seven children (nine elbows) were available for follow-up at an average of fifty-six months after surgery. All nine elbows had an improved arc of motion (an average increase of 57 degrees ). Following excision, heterotopic ossification did not recur. All children were able to reach the face and the perineum following the operation. CONCLUSIONS Excision of heterotopic ossification around the elbow following a burn injury in children can improve the arc of motion and improve the function of the extremity. A relatively simple operative and postoperative regimen can achieve satisfactory results.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2010

Surgical treatment of chronic acromioclavicular dislocation: Comparison between two surgical procedures for anatomic reconstruction

Gianfranco Fraschini; Pietro Ciampi; Celeste Scotti; Rosa Ballis; Giuseppe M. Peretti

INTRODUCTION Surgical treatment of chronic complete acromioclavicular (AC) joint dislocation is still debated and no gold standard surgical procedure has been identified. MATERIALS AND METHODS A retrospective series of 90 patients treated for AC dislocations is reported here. Patients were divided into three groups: group 1 receiving AC reconstruction with a Dacron vascular prosthesis; group 2 receiving AC reconstruction with LARS(®) artificial ligament; group 3 receiving conservative treatment. Follow-up was performed after 1, 6 and 15 months with plain radiographs, UCLA, SPADI and modified UCLA acromioclavicular rating scales. RESULTS Patients treated surgically presented significant better functional outcome compared to patients treated conservatively with overall positive results in 93.3% of patients for group 2 and 53.3% of patients for group 1. However, reconstruction with Dacron vascular prosthesis presented an unacceptable high complications rate (43.3%). CONCLUSION Our results show that anatomic AC reconstruction with LARS(®) artificial ligament resulted in both satisfactory functional outcome and low complication rate. Therefore, we recommend this procedure for the treatment of chronic complete AC dislocations.


Tissue Engineering | 2002

Histomorphometric Analysis of a Cell-Based Model of Cartilage Repair

Kimberly M. Spangenberg; Giuseppe M. Peretti; Carol Trahan; Mark A. Randolph; Lawrence J. Bonassar

This study examined the morphology of chondrocytes in an established model of articular cartilage repair. Articular cartilage was harvested from young sheep and seeded onto pieces of devitalized sheep cartilage. The seeded pieces were stacked in pairs and wrapped in fibrin glue, and then implanted subcutaneously in the dorsum of athymic mice. Samples were harvested after 6 weeks and examined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) or by light microscopy. TEM revealed that the cells in direct apposition to the devitalized cartilage were elongated, with an enlarged cytoplasm, and a ruffled border. TEM of cells far from the interface with scaffold tissue revealed rounded cells with large nuclei that appeared similar to normal chondrocytes. Quantitative morphometry of histologic specimens revealed that cell area, relative amount of cytoplasm, cell aspect ratio, and relative nuclear displacement were all higher in cells near the interface with the scaffold tissue, and decreased with distance from the interface. These indices of cell morphology are all consistent with an active remodeling of the scaffold at the cell-scaffold interface.


BioMed Research International | 2015

PRP and Articular Cartilage: A Clinical Update

A. Marmotti; Roberto Rossi; Filippo Castoldi; Eliana Roveda; Gianni Michielon; Giuseppe M. Peretti

The convincing background of the recent studies, investigating the different potentials of platelet-rich plasma, offers the clinician an appealing alternative for the treatment of cartilage lesions and osteoarthritis. Recent evidences in literature have shown that PRP may be helpful both as an adjuvant for surgical treatment of cartilage defects and as a therapeutic tool by intra-articular injection in patients affected by osteoarthritis. In this review, the authors introduce the trophic and anti-inflammatory properties of PRP and the different products of the available platelet concentrates. Then, in a complex scenario made of a great number of clinical variables, they resume the current literature on the PRP applications in cartilage surgery as well as the use of intra-articular PRP injections for the conservative treatment of cartilage degenerative lesions and osteoarthritis in humans, available as both case series and comparative studies. The result of this review confirms the fascinating biological role of PRP, although many aspects yet remain to be clarified and the use of PRP in a clinical setting has to be considered still exploratory.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2016

Anti-TNFα agents curb platelet activation in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Angelo A. Manfredi; Mattia Baldini; Marina Camera; Elena Baldissera; Marta Brambilla; Giuseppe M. Peretti; Attilio Maseri; Patrizia Rovere-Querini; Elena Tremoli; Maria Grazia Sabbadini; Norma Maugeri

Background Cardiovascular disease is important in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Tissue factor (TF) is expressed upon platelet activation and initiates coagulation. Anti-tumour necrosis factor-α (TNFα) agents seem to decrease RA-associated cardiovascular events. We investigated whether (1) TNFα activates human platelets and (2) TNFα pharmacological blockade modulates the platelet-leucocyte reciprocal activation in RA. Design The expression of platelet TNFα receptors has been assessed by flow cytometry and immunogold electron microscopy. Platelet and leucocyte activation has been assessed also in the presence of antibodies against the TNFα receptors 1 and 2 and of infliximab. TF expression, binding to fibrinogen and phosphatidylserine exposure, has been assessed by flow cytometry, TF activity by coagulation time and by endogenous thrombin generation. Markers of platelet and leucocyte activation have been assessed in 161 subjects: 42 patients with RA, 12 with osteoarthritis, 37 age-matched and sex-matched patients with chronic stable angina and 70 age-matched and sex-matched healthy subjects. Results TNFα elicited the platelet activation and the expression of TF, which in turn prompted thrombin generation and clot formation. Inhibition of the TNFα-induced activation restricted platelet ability to activate leucocytes and to induce leucocyte TF. TNFα inhibition did not influence platelet activation induced by collagen, ADP or thrombin receptor activating peptide-6. Platelets of patients with RA were more activated than those of controls. Activation was reduced in patients treated with TNFα inhibitors. Conclusions TNFα-dependent pathways control platelet activation and TF expression in RA. Further studies will verify whether the protective effect of TNFα inhibitors on cardiovascular events involves their ability to modulate platelet function.


Biorheology | 2008

Tensile and compressive properties of healthy and osteoarthritic human articular cartilage

Federica Boschetti; Giuseppe M. Peretti

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a disease affecting articular cartilage and the underlying bone, resulting from many biological and mechanical interacting factors which change the extracellular matrix (ECM) and cells and lead to increasing levels of cartilage degeneration, like softening, fibrillation, ulceration and cartilage loss. The early diagnosis of the disease is fundamental to prevent pain, further tissue degeneration and reduce hospital costs. Although morphological modifications can be detected by modern non-invasive diagnostic techniques, they may not be evident in the early stages of OA. The mechanical properties of articular cartilage are related to its composition and structure and are sensitive to even small changes in the ECM that could occur in early OA. The aim of the present study was to compare the mechanical properties of healthy and OA cartilage using a combined experimental-numerical approach. Experimental assessments consisted of step wise confined and unconfined compression and tension stress relaxation tests on disks (for compression) or strips (for tension) of cartilage obtained from human femoral heads discarded from the operating room after total hip replacement. The numerical model was based on the biphasic theory and included the tension-compression non-linearity. Considering OA samples vs normal samples, the static compressive modulus was 55-68% lower, the permeability was 60-80% higher, the dynamic compressive modulus was 59-64% lower, the static tension modulus was 72-83% lower. The model successfully simulated the experimental tests performed on healthy and OA cartilage and was used in combination with the experimental tests to evaluate the role of different ECM components in the mechanical response of normal and OA cartilage.


Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 2016

Non-surgical treatments for the management of early osteoarthritis

Giuseppe Filardo; Elizaveta Kon; Umile Giuseppe Longo; Henning Madry; Paolo Marchettini; A. Marmotti; Dieter Van Assche; Giacomo Zanon; Giuseppe M. Peretti

AbstractNon-surgical treatments are usually the first choice for the management of knee degeneration, especially in the early osteoarthritis (OA) phase when no clear lesions or combined abnormalities need to be addressed surgically. Early OA may be addressed by a wide range of non-surgical approaches, from non-pharmacological modalities to dietary supplements and pharmacological therapies, as well as physical therapies and novel biological minimally invasive procedures involving injections of various substances to obtain a clinical improvement and possibly a disease-modifying effect. Numerous pharmaceutical agents are able to provide clinical benefit, but no one has shown all the characteristic of an ideal treatment, and side effects have been reported at both systemic and local level. Patients and physicians should have realistic outcome goals in pharmacological treatment, which should be considered together with other conservative measures. Among these, exercise is an effective conservative approach, while physical therapies lack literature support. Even though a combination of these therapeutic options might be the most suitable strategy, there is a paucity of studies focusing on combining treatments, which is the most common clinical scenario. Further studies are needed to increase the limited evidence on non-surgical treatments and their combination, to optimize indications, application modalities, and results with particular focus on early OA. In fact, most of the available evidence regards established OA. Increased knowledge about degeneration mechanisms will help to better target the available treatments and develop new biological options, where preliminary results are promising, especially concerning early disease phases. Specific treatments aimed at improving joint homoeostasis, or even counteracting tissue damage by inducing regenerative processes, might be successful in early OA, where tissue loss and anatomical changes are still at very initial stages. Level of evidence IV.


Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 2016

The role of meniscal tissue in joint protection in early osteoarthritis

René Verdonk; Henning Madry; Nogah Shabshin; Florian Dirisamer; Giuseppe M. Peretti; Nicolas Pujol; Tim Spalding; Peter Verdonk; Romain Seil; Vincenzo Condello; Berardo Di Matteo; Johannes Zellner; Peter Angele

It is widely accepted that partial meniscectomy leads to early onset of osteoarthritis (OA). A strong correlation exists between the amount and location of the resected meniscus and the development of degenerative changes in the knee. On the other hand, osteoarthritic changes of the joint alter the structural and functional integrity of meniscal tissue. These alterations might additionally compromise the limited healing capacity of the meniscus. In young, active patients without cartilage damage, meniscus therapy including partial meniscectomy, meniscus suture, and meniscus replacement has proven beneficial effects in long-term studies. Even in an early osteoarthritic milieu, there is a relevant regenerative potential of the meniscus and the surrounding cartilage. This potential should be taken into account, and meniscal surgery can be performed with the correct timing and the proper indication even in the presence of early OA.Level of evidence IV.

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Gianfranco Fraschini

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Laura Mangiavini

University of Milano-Bicocca

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