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Dive into the research topics where Michael J. Pagnani is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael J. Pagnani.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1998

The Active Compression Test: A New and Effective Test for Diagnosing Labral Tears and Acromioclavicular Joint Abnormality

Stephen J. O'Brien; Michael J. Pagnani; Stephen Fealy; Scott R. McGlynn; Joseph B. Wilson

Labral tears and acromioclavicular joint abnormalities were differentiated on physical examination using a new diagnostic test. The standing patient forward flexed the arm to 90° with the elbow in full extension and then adducted the arm 10° to 15° medial to the sagittal plane of the body and internally rotated it so that the thumb pointed downward. The examiner, standing behind the patient, applied a uniform downward force to the arm. With the arm in the same position, the palm was then fully supinated and the maneuver was repeated. The test was considered positive if pain was elicited during the first maneuver, and was reduced or eliminated with the second. Pain localized to the acromioclavicular joint or “on top” was diagnostic of acromioclavicular joint abnormality, whereas pain or painful clicking described as “inside” the shoulder was considered indicative of labral abnormality. A prospective study was performed on 318 patients to determine the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of the test. Fifty-three of 56 patients whose preoperative examinations indicated a labral tear had confirmed labral tears that were repaired at surgery. Fifty-five of 62 patients who had pain in the acromioclavicular joint and whose preoperative examinations indicated abnormalilties in the joint had positive clinical, operative, or radiographic evidence of acromioclavicular injury. There were no false-negative results in either group.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1995

Effect of lesions of the superior portion of the glenoid labrum on glenohumeral translation.

Michael J. Pagnani; Xiang-Hua Deng; R F Warren; Peter A. Torzilli; David W. Altchek

Lesions of the superior portion of the glenoid labrum were created in seven cadaveric shoulders. The shoulders were mounted on a special apparatus attached to a servocontrolled hydraulic materials-testing device. Sequential fifty-newton anterior, posterior, superior, and inferior forces and a twenty-two-newton joint compressive load were applied to the shoulders. In addition, a fifty-five-newton force was applied to the tendon of the long head of the biceps brachii. The shoulders were tested in seven positions of glenohumeral elevation and rotation. An isolated lesion of the anterosuperior portion of the labrum, which did not involve the supraglenoid insertion of the biceps brachii, had no significant effect on anteroposterior or superoinferior glenohumeral translation, either with or without application of the fifty-five-newton force to the biceps brachii tendon. In contrast, a complete lesion of the superior portion of the labrum that destabilized the insertion of the biceps resulted in significant increases in anteroposterior and superoinferior glenohumeral translations. At 45 degrees of glenohumeral elevation, the complete lesion led to a 6.0-millimeter increase in anterior translation when the arm was in neutral rotation and to a 6.3-millimeter increase when the arm was in internal rotation; inferior translation also increased, by 1.9 to 2.5 millimeters. The increases in translation persisted despite application of a fifty-five-newton force to the long head of the biceps.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1996

An Arthroscopic Technique for Anterior Stabilization of the Shoulder with a Bioabsorbable Tack

Kevin P. Speer; Russell F. Warren; Michael J. Pagnani; Jon J.P. Warner

Arthroscopically assisted repair of the anterior aspect of the labrum with use of a bioabsorbable tack was performed in fifty-two consecutive patients who had chronic anterior instability of the shoulder. The average age of the patients was twenty-eight years (range, sixteen to fifty years). The etiology of the instability was a traumatic injury in forty-nine patients; twenty-six of those injuries were sustained during participation in a contact sport. Fifty shoulders had a Bankart lesion. The patients were evaluated at an average of forty-two months (range, twenty-four to sixty months) after the procedure. Forty-one (79 per cent) of the patients were asymptomatic and were able to participate in sports without restriction. The repair was considered to have failed in eleven (21 per cent) of the patients. In four of them, the failure resulted from a single traumatic reinjury during participation in a contact sport, and three of these reinjuries were treated nonoperatively. The remaining seven failures occurred atraumatically. Eight patients had an open glenoid-based capsulorrhaphy as a consequence of recurrent instability. At the reoperation, no evidence of the tack was found in any patient. In seven patients, the Bankart lesion had completely healed, and the anteroinferior aspect of the capsule was patulous. Anterior stabilization of the shoulder with a bioabsorbable tack may be indicated for patients who have anterior instability but do not need a capsulorrhaphy or capsular imbrication to reduce the joint volume.


Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery | 1996

Role of the long head of the biceps brachii in glenohumeral stability: A biomechanical study in cadavera

Michael J. Pagnani; Xiang-Hua Deng; Russell F. Warren; Peter A. Torzilli; Stephen J. O'Brien

Ten cadaveric shoulders were tested to evaluate the effect of simulated contraction of the long head of the biceps brachii on glenohumeral translation. The shoulders were mounted on a special apparatus attached to a servo-controlled hydraulic testing device. Sequential 50 N anterior, posterior, superior, and inferior forces and a 22 N joint compressive load were applied to the shoulders. An air cylinder applied a constant force to the tendon of the long head of the biceps brachii. The shoulders were tested in seven positions of glenohumeral elevation and rotation. Application of a force to the long head of the biceps brachii resulted in statistically significant decreases in humeral head translation. The influence of the long head of the biceps was more pronounced at middle and lower elevation angles. When the shoulder was placed in 45 degrees of elevation and neutral rotation, application of a 55 N force to the biceps tendon reduced anterior translation by 10.4 mm (p = 0.001), inferior translation by 5.3 mm (p = 0.01), and superior translation by 1.2 mm (p = 0.004).


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2002

Surgical Treatment of Traumatic Anterior Shoulder Instability in American Football Players

Michael J. Pagnani; David C. Dome

Background: American football players have been reported to be at high risk for postoperative instability after arthroscopic stabilization of anterior shoulder instability. While some authors have recommended open methods of stabilization in athletes who play contact sports, there are few data in the literature showing more favorable results with use of an open technique. We reviewed the results of an open technique of anterior shoulder stabilization in fifty-eight American football players after a minimum of two years of follow-up. Methods: Fifty-eight American football players underwent open stabilization with use of a standardized technique for the treatment of recurrent anterior shoulder instability. Forty-seven patients had recurrent dislocations, and the remaining eleven had recurrent subluxations. The average age of the patients was 18.2 years, and the average duration of follow-up was thirty-seven months. Patients were evaluated according to the shoulder scoring system of the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons and with use of the shoulder instability score described by Rowe and Zarins. Results: There were no postoperative dislocations. Postoperative subluxation occurred in two patients, neither of whom had had a dislocation prior to the operation. Forward flexion and external rotation returned to within 5° of those of the contralateral shoulder in forty-nine patients. The average score according to the system of the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons was 97.0 points, and the average Rowe and Zarins score was 93.6 points. Fifty-five patients had a good or excellent result, and fifty-two of the fifty-eight returned to playing football for at least one year. One patient was forced to stop playing because of recurrent instability. Conclusions: Open stabilization is a predictable method of restoring shoulder stability in American football players while maintaining a range of motion approximating that found after arthroscopic stabilization. Postoperative stability appears to be superior to that reported after arthroscopic techniques in this population of patients.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1996

Arthroscopic Shoulder Stabilization Using Transglenoid Sutures A Four-Year Minimum Followup

Michael J. Pagnani; Russell F. Warren; David W. Altchek; Thomas L. Wickiewicz; Allen F. Anderson

Thirty-seven of 41 consecutive patients with recurrent anterior instability of the shoulder were retrospectively observed for a mean of 5.6 years (range, 4 to 10) after an arthroscopic stabilization procedure had been per formed. The operative technique involved the use of transglenoid sutures to repair the capsule and labrum. According to the criteria established by Rowe, 27 pa tients (74%) had good or excellent results, and 3 pa tients (7%) were graded as fair. Seven patients (19%) developed recurrent instability after the procedure and had failed results. Failure rates were equal in patients with a history of recurrent dislocation and those with recurrent subluxation. Absence of a Bankart lesion at operation was associated with postoperative instability (P = 0.03). The presence or size of humeral head defects did not influence the result. Eight of 12 athletes who engaged in sports requiring repetitive overhead shoulder motion returned to full activity, and none of the 12 developed instability after operation. Four of the 13 patients who participated in contact sports or rec reational skiing developed postoperative instability (P = 0.21). All failures occurred within 2 years of the procedure.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1993

Anatomic considerations in harvesting the semitendinosus and gracilis tendons and a technique of harvest.

Michael J. Pagnani; Jon J.P. Warner; Stephen J. O'Brien; Russell F. Warren

Although the semitendinosus and gracilis tendons have long been used in ligamentous reconstruction proce dures of the knee, their anatomic relationships have not been explicitly detailed. Therefore, cadaveric dissec tions were performed on fresh-frozen adult knees to examine these relationships. Several key anatomic points are useful in the harvest of these tendons. Their conjoined insertion site is medial and distal to the tibial tubercle. They become distinct structures at a point that is farther medial and slightly proximal. Tendon harvest is facilitated by identifying the tendons proximal to this point. The superficial medial collateral ligament lies deep to the tendons in this area and should not be disturbed. The tendons are ensheathed in a dense fascial layer that may impede tendon stripping. The accessory insertion of the semitendinosus tendon (which was present in 77% of the knees dissected) should be identified and transected to avoid tendon damage at harvest. Knee flexion may reduce the risk of injury to the saphenous nerve as it crosses the gracilis tendon. Variation in tendon diameter affects graft strength.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1997

Osteochondritis Dissecans of the Femoral Condyles Long-term Results of Excision of the Fragment

Allen F. Anderson; Michael J. Pagnani

Nineteen patients with 20 osteochondritis dissecans lesions were evaluated between 2 and 20 years after excision of a partially detached (grade III) or loose (grade IV) fragment from the femoral condyles. Evalu ation with the Hughston rating scale for osteochondritis dissecans revealed one excellent result, four good, four fair, six poor, and five failure results. Eleven pa tients had developed osteochondritis dissecans before skeletal maturity. In contrast to what has been stated in the literature, the results in these patients were no better than in those who developed osteochondritis dissecans as adults. The short-term results of excision are good, but the long-term results are extremely poor. Consequently, we recommend bone grafting and re placement of the fragment when it is technically pos sible because the long-term results are better than those after excision.


Arthroscopy | 1997

Antegrade drilling for osteochondritis dissecans of the knee

Allen F. Anderson; David B. Richards; Michael J. Pagnani

Twenty-four knees with osteochondritis dissecans of the femoral condyles failed a conservative program and were treated with antegrade drilling. To our knowledge, this represents the largest reported series using this technique. The average age at the time of surgery was 13 years 6 months. Seventeen patients had open physes, and four were skeletally mature. Nineteen lesions involved the medial femoral condyle, and five involved the lateral femoral condyle. The average follow-up was 5 years. Postoperative evaluation included rating by the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) form and the Hughston Rating Scale for osteochondritis dissecans. Twenty of the 24 lesions healed after antegrade drilling, and the average time of healing was 4 months. According to the criteria on the IKDC grading form, 14 were normal, 6 nearly normal, three abnormal, and one severely abnormal. The results of the Hughston Rating Scale were similar: 15 were excellent, seven good, one fair, and one poor. Only two of the four skeletally mature patients healed after antegrade drilling. Antegrade drilling is an effective method of treatment for osteochondritis dissecans of the knee that occurs in adolescents with open physes. This operation is not as likely to result in a successful outcome in patients with closed physes; consequently, other methods should be considered in skeletally mature patients.


Arthroscopy | 1995

Arthroscopic fixation of superior labral lesions using a biodegradable implant: A preliminary report

Michael J. Pagnani; Kevin P. Speer; David W. Altchek; Russell F. Warren; David M. Dines

Twenty-two patients were treated for symptomatic lesions of the superior glenoid labrum in association with instability of the tendinous insertion of the long head of the biceps brachii. A biodegradable implant was used to fix the labrum to the bony glenoid using an arthroscopic technique. At 2-year average follow-up, satisfactory results were obtained in 86% of the patients. Two patients, both of whom had undergone concomitant subacromial decompression, continued to complain of pain after the procedure; 3 patients had restricted motion postoperatively, and 1 required manipulation under anesthesia. Twelve of 13 overhead athletes were able to return to full premorbid function. Arthroscopic fixation of unstable lesions of the superior labrum led to a resolution of symptoms in the majority of patients. There were no complications related to the use of the biodegradable implant.

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Russell F. Warren

Hospital for Special Surgery

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David W. Altchek

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Allen F. Anderson

Washington University in St. Louis

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David M. Dines

Hospital for Special Surgery

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R F Warren

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Stephen J. O'Brien

Saint Petersburg State University

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Garth R. Smith

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Peter A. Torzilli

Hospital for Special Surgery

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