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Dive into the research topics where Lorenzo Aulisa is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorenzo Aulisa.


Scoliosis | 2012

2011 SOSORT guidelines: Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation treatment of idiopathic scoliosis during growth

Stefano Negrini; Angelo Gabriele Aulisa; Lorenzo Aulisa; Alin B Circo; Jean Claude de Mauroy; Jacek Durmała; Theodoros B Grivas; Patrick Knott; Tomasz Kotwicki; Toru Maruyama; Silvia Minozzi; Joseph P O'Brien; Dimitris Papadopoulos; Manuel Rigo; Charles H. Rivard; Michele Romano; James H Wynne; Monica Villagrasa; Hans-Rudolf Weiss; Fabio Zaina

BackgroundThe International Scientific Society on Scoliosis Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation Treatment (SOSORT), that produced its first Guidelines in 2005, felt the need to revise them and increase their scientific quality. The aim is to offer to all professionals and their patients an evidence-based updated review of the actual evidence on conservative treatment of idiopathic scoliosis (CTIS).MethodsAll types of professionals (specialty physicians, and allied health professionals) engaged in CTIS have been involved together with a methodologist and a patient representative. A review of all the relevant literature and of the existing Guidelines have been performed. Documents, recommendations, and practical approach flow charts have been developed according to a Delphi procedure. A methodological and practical review has been made, and a final Consensus Session was held during the 2011 Barcelona SOSORT Meeting.ResultsThe contents of the document are: methodology; generalities on idiopathic scoliosis; approach to CTIS in different patients, with practical flow-charts; literature review and recommendations on assessment, bracing, physiotherapy, Physiotherapeutic Specific Exercises (PSE) and other CTIS. Sixty-five recommendations have been given, divided in the following topics: Bracing (20 recommendations), PSE to prevent scoliosis progression during growth (8), PSE during brace treatment and surgical therapy (5), Other conservative treatments (3), Respiratory function and exercises (3), Sports activities (6), Assessment (20). No recommendations reached a Strength of Evidence level I; 2 were level II; 7 level III; and 20 level IV; through the Consensus procedure 26 reached level V and 10 level VI. The Strength of Recommendations was Grade A for 13, B for 49 and C for 3; none had grade D.ConclusionThese Guidelines have been a big effort of SOSORT to paint the actual situation of CTIS, starting from the evidence, and filling all the gray areas using a scientific method. According to results, it is possible to understand the lack of research in general on CTIS. SOSORT invites researchers to join, and clinicians to develop good research strategies to allow in the future to support or refute these recommendations according to new and stronger evidence.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2004

Clinical Factors Associated with an Increased Risk of Perioperative Blood Transfusion in Nonanemic Patients Undergoing Total Hip Arthroplasty

Enrico Pola; Pierangelo Papaleo; Angelo Santoliquido; G. Gasparini; Lorenzo Aulisa; Ernesto De Santis

BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to identify clinical factors associated with an increased need for perioperative blood transfusion in nonanemic patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty. METHODS We evaluated eighty-five consecutive nonanemic patients who underwent elective, unilateral, cementless, primary total hip arthroplasty and met our inclusion criteria. We attempted to determine whether clinical parameters influencing perioperative blood loss, such as age, gender, hypertension, and body mass index, were also associated with the need for perioperative blood transfusion. RESULTS Perioperative blood transfusion was required in twenty-four (28%) of the eighty-five nonanemic patients. When considered alone, age, gender, hypertension, and body mass index were not significantly associated with an increased risk of perioperative blood transfusion, on the basis of the numbers available. In contrast, there was a significantly increased risk of blood transfusion when two or more of these clinical parameters were present (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that clinical variables such as age, gender, hypertension, and body mass index may have a synergistic effect on the risk of transfusion in patients undergoing elective total hip arthroplasty. The simultaneous analysis of these parameters might help to stratify patients with different risks for transfusion and may increase the efficiency and reduce the cost of blood-ordering practices associated with total hip arthroplasty. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Prognostic study, Level II-1 (retrospective study). See Instructions to Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


Spine | 2001

Patient outcomes after Harrington instrumentation for idiopathic scoliosis : A 15- to 28-year evaluation

Roberto Padua; Sergio Padua; Lorenzo Aulisa; E. Ceccarelli; Luca Padua; Emilio Romanini; Gustavo Zanoli; Andrea Campi

Study Design. A retrospective study was performed, using the Short Form-36 Health Survey and the Roland and Morris Disability Questionnaire, to investigate patient outcomes after fusion for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis using Harrington rod instrumentation. Objective. To evaluate health-related quality of life and low back pain in a long-term follow-up study of surgery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Summary of Background Data. The commonly accepted surgical treatment for idiopathic evolutive scoliosis is vertebral fusion. It has been suggested that this procedure may cause low back pain and a poor quality of life over the long term. Outcome measures after surgery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis have focused mainly on objective parameters such as radiographic measures. However, this information has proved to be correlated only weakly with outcomes that are more relevant to patients, such as functional status and symptoms. Until recently, only a few long-term outcome studies have used standardized and validated patient-oriented tools to evaluate surgically treated patients with scoliosis. Methods. In this study, 70 patients treated with a standard Harrington technique were recontacted and evaluated by means of self-administered questionnaires (Short Form-36 Health Survey and Roland and Morris Disability, clinical examination, and radiographic analysis. Preoperative and follow-up radiographic findings were registered. Relations between radiographic and patient-oriented data were evaluated. Results. A comparison between the current sample and the Italian age-matched normative data for the Short Form-36 Health Survey showed them to have a similar pattern. Findings showed the patient-oriented outcome to be correlated inversely with the extension of vertebral fusion and the preoperative Cobb angle. Conclusion. Long-term follow-up evaluation of Harrington rod fusion for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis showed no important impairment of health-related quality of life, as measured by patient-oriented evaluation.


Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume) | 1998

Carpal tunnel syndrome : Indication for surgical treatment based on electrophysiologic study

Lorenzo Aulisa; Francesco Ciro Tamburrelli; Roberto Padua; Emilio Romanini; Mauro Lo Monaco; Luca Padua

A prospective study of 50 hands from 45 consecutive patients surgically treated for idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome was conducted to determinate the recovery capacity of the median nerve after open surgical release. Subjects were evaluated by clinical history, physical examination, and electrophysiologic testing. Motor and sensory terminal latencies and motor and sensory conduction velocities were examined before surgery and 2 weeks, 2 months, and 6 months after surgical decompression. All patients showed improvement of postoperative electrophysiologic values; the amount of improvement was dependent on the degree of preoperative impairment. Complete restoration of clinical and electrophysiologic nerve function was observed only in patients with mild carpal tunnel syndrome.


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 1996

Surgical prognosis in carpal tunnel syndrome: usefulness of a preoperative neurophysiological assessment

Luca Padua; Mauro LoMonaco; Lorenzo Aulisa; Francesco Ciro Tamburrelli; Enza Maria Valente; R. Padua; B. Gregori; Pietro Tonali

In this study 37 CTS hands underwent pre‐ and post‐operative (15 days, 2 and 6 months) evaluation of median nerve distal motor latency (DML) and sensory nerve conduction velocities (SNCV: I digit and III digit‐wrist). Pre‐operatively, CTS hands were classified as mild (decreased SNCV, normal DML), moderate (decreased SNCV, increased DML) or severe (absent sensory nerve action potentials, increased DML). Post‐operatively, all hands presented clinical and neurophysiological improvement. The three groups of patient showed different clinical and neurophysiological responses to nerve decompression: we observed a rapid restitutio ad integrumin mild group, an improvement with normalisation in about 50% of the hands in moderate group, and a high percentage of restore of the sensory responses with no normalisation in severe group. A marked improvement of sensory symptoms was observed in all cases, but some degree of motor and/or sensory deficit was still present six months after surgery in more advanced cases. Preoperative electrophysiological assessment of median nerve function in CTS hands have an important role in predicting the outcome of surgical decompression.


Spine | 2007

Association between IL-6 and MMP-3 gene polymorphisms and adolescent idiopathic scoliosis : A case-control study

Lorenzo Aulisa; Pierangelo Papaleo; Enrico Pola; Flavia Angelini; Angelo Gabriele Aulisa; Francesco Ciro Tamburrelli; Paolo Pola; Carlo Ambrogio Logroscino

Study Design. Case-control study. Objective. As inflammation plays a key role in the etiology of intervertebral disc degeneration, we suggest a possible contribution of pro-inflammatory gene polymorphisms in the pathogenesis of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Summary of Background Data. The nucleus pulposus of scoliotic discs responds to exogenous stimuli by secreting interleukin-6 (IL-6) and other inflammatory cytokines. The association between matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and disc degeneration has been reported by several investigators. A human MMP-3 promoter 5A/6A gene polymorphism regulates MMP-3 genes expression, while the G/C polymorphism of the promoter region of IL-6 gene influences levels and functional activity of the IL-6 protein. Methods. We conducted a case-control study to investigate whether the 5A/6A polymorphism of the MMP-3 gene and the G/C polymorphism of the promoter region of IL-6 gene were associated with susceptibility to AIS. Results. The frequency of the 5A/5A genotype of MMP-3 gene polymorphism in patients with scoliosis was almost 3 times higher than in controls (30.2% vs. 11.2%, p 0.001), and the frequency of the G/G genotype of IL-6 gene polymorphism in patients with scoliosis was almost 2 times higher than in controls (52.8% vs. 26.2%, P < 0.001). 5A/5A genotype of MMP-3 gene polymorphism and G/G genotype of IL-6 gene polymorphism are independently associated with a higher risk of scoliosis (odds ratio, respectively, 3.34 and 10.54). Conclusion. This is the first study that has evaluated the possibility that gene variants of IL-6 and MMPs might be associated with scoliosis and suggests that MMP-3 and IL-6 promoter polymorphisms constitute important factors for the genetic predisposition to scoliosis.


The Scientific World Journal | 2010

Multiple Pathways to the Same End: Mechanisms of Myonuclear Apoptosis in Sarcopenia of Aging

Emanuele Marzetti; Giuseppe Privitera; Vincenzo Simili; Stephanie E. Wohlgemuth; Lorenzo Aulisa; Marco Pahor; Christiaan Leeuwenburgh

Sarcopenia, the age-related decline in muscle mass and function, represents a significant health issue due to the high prevalence of frailty and disability associated with this condition. Nevertheless, the cellular mechanisms responsible for the loss of muscle mass in old age are still largely unknown. An altered regulation of myocyte apoptosis has recently emerged as a possible contributor to the pathogenesis of sarcopenia. Studies in animal models have shown that the severity of skeletal muscle apoptosis increases over the course of aging and correlates with the degree of muscle mass and strength decline. Several apoptotic pathways are operative in aged muscles, with the mitochondria- and TNF-α-mediated pathways likely being the most relevant to sarcopenia. However, despite the growing number of studies on the subject, a definite mechanistic link between myocyte apoptosis and age-related muscle atrophy has not yet been established. Furthermore, the evidence on the role played by apoptosis in human sarcopenia is still sparse. Clearly, further research is required to better define the involvement of myocyte apoptosis in the pathogenesis of muscle loss at advanced age. This knowledge will likely help in the design of more effective therapeutic strategies to preserve muscle mass into old age, thus fostering independence of the elderly population and reducing the socioeconomic burden associated with sarcopenia.


Scoliosis | 2009

Treatment of thoraco-lumbar curves in adolescent females affected by idiopathic scoliosis with a progressive action short brace (PASB): assessment of results according to the SRS committee on bracing and nonoperative management standardization criteria

Angelo Gabriele Aulisa; Vincenzo Guzzanti; Marco Galli; Carlo Perisano; Francesco Falciglia; Lorenzo Aulisa

BackgroundThe effectiveness of conservative treatment of scoliosis is controversial. Some studies suggest that brace is effective in stopping curve progression, whilst others did not report such an effect.The purpose of the present study was to effectiveness of Progressive Action Short Brace (PASB) in the correction of thoraco-lumbar curves, in agreement with the Scoliosis Research Society (SRS) Committee on Bracing and Nonoperative Management Standardisation Criteria.MethodsFifty adolescent females (mean age 11.8 ± 0.5 years) with thoraco-lumbar curve and a pre-treatment Risser score ranging from 0 to 2 have been enrolled. The minimum duration of follow-up was 24 months (mean: 55.4 ± 44.5 months). Antero-posterior radiographs were used to estimate the curve magnitude (CM) and the torsion of the apical vertebra (TA) at 5 time points: beginning of treatment (t1), one year after the beginning of treatment (t2), intermediate time between t1 and t4 (t3), end of weaning (t4), 2-year minimum follow-up from t4 (t5). Three situations were distinguished: curve correction, curve stabilisation and curve progression.The Kruskal Wallis and Spearman Rank Correlation tests have been used as statistical tests.ResultsCM mean value was 29,30 ± 5,16 SD at t1 and 14,67 ± 7,65 SD at t5. TA was 12.70 ± 6,14 SD at t1 and 8,95 ± 5,82 at t5. The variation between measures of Cobb and Perdriolle degrees at t1,2,3,4,5 and between CM t5-t1 and TA t5-t1 were significantly different.Curve correction was accomplished in 94% of patients, whereas a curve stabilisation was obtained in 6% of patients.ConclusionThe PASB, due to its peculiar biomechanical action on vertebral modelling, is highly effective in correcting thoraco-lumbar curves.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1994

The role of upper limb somatosensory evoked potentials in the management of cervical spondylotic myelopathy: preliminary data

Domenico Restuccia; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro; Massimiliano Valeriani; Lorenzo Aulisa; Marco Galli; Pietro Tonali; François Maugière

We studied upper limb somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) in 11 patients with MRI and clinical evidence of cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM), before and after cervical open-door laminoplasty. SEP studies before surgery revealed two main types of abnormality, the first characterized by the isolated loss of the spinal N13 response, reflecting the dysfunction of dorsal horn cervical cells in 4 patients. The second combined abnormalities of both spinal N13 and scalp far-field P14 potential, suggesting the involvement of both dorsal horn cells and dorsal columns at the cervical level in 7 patients. After surgery, N13 recovered in 9 patients, while P14 abnormalities remained unchanged. Clinical recovery, evaluated by means of the Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) disability scale, was accompanied by SEP improvement. Moreover, this improvement was more pronounced in patients with isolated loss of the N13 than in patients with combined abnormalities of the N13 and scalp P14 response. Our data strongly suggest that upper limb SEPs can be useful in monitoring the effectiveness of surgery, as well as in selecting before surgery patients who are likely to have a better postsurgical outcome.


Spine | 2012

Treatment of lumbar curves in scoliotic adolescent females with progressive action short brace: a case series based on the Scoliosis Research Society Committee Criteria.

Angelo Gabriele Aulisa; Vincenzo Guzzanti; Carlo Perisano; Emanuele Marzetti; Francesco Falciglia; Lorenzo Aulisa

Study Design. A prospective interventional study. Objective. To determine the outcomes of adolescents affected by idiopathic lumbar scoliosis treated with a progressive action short brace (PASB). Summary of Background Data. The efficacy of conservative treatment of scoliosis is still debated. In a recent study, we showed that the PASB was effective in correcting deformities in adolescents with idiopathic thoracolumbar scoliosis. The purpose of the present study was to extend our preliminary findings by determining the results of PASB treatment in scoliotic adolescents with lumbar curves. Methods. Patients were 40 adolescent girls (age [mean ± SD] = 11.6 ± 0.7 yr]) with lumbar curves and a pretreatment Risser score between 0 and 2. All patients were prescribed with a full-time PASB. The minimum duration of follow-up was 24 months (mean ± SD = 41.6 ± 34.5 mo). Anteroposterior radiographs were used to estimate the curve magnitude (CM) and the torsion of the apical vertebra (TA) at 5 time points: beginning of treatment (t1), 1 year after the beginning of treatment (t2), intermediate time between t1 and t4 (t3), end of weaning (t4), and 2-year minimum follow-up from t4 (t5). Three outcomes were distinguished: curve correction, curve stabilization, and curve progression. Results. A significant reduction in CM was achieved from t1 (Cobb angle [mean ± SD] = 26.4° ± 2.8) to t5 (Cobb angle [mean ± SD] = 13.8° ± 7.9; P < 0.001). Likewise, the PASB reduced TA from Perdriolle rotation angles of 10.8° (SD = 3.7) at t1 to 7.9° (SD = 4.2) at t5 (P < 0.05). Curve correction was accomplished in 82.5% of patients, whereas curve stabilization was obtained in 17.5% of patients. None of the patients experienced curve progression. Conclusion. The PASB allows a complete curve correction in most cases. No patients exhibited curve progression.

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Angelo Gabriele Aulisa

The Catholic University of America

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Vincenzo Guzzanti

Boston Children's Hospital

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Marco Giordano

Boston Children's Hospital

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Luca Padua

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Marco Galli

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Emanuele Marzetti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Francesco Ciro Tamburrelli

The Catholic University of America

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Enrico Pola

Sapienza University of Rome

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