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Dive into the research topics where Victor Fornasier is active.

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Featured researches published by Victor Fornasier.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1985

A study of implant failure in the Wagner resurfacing arthroplasty.

R S Bell; J. Schatzker; Victor Fornasier; Stuart B. Goodman

Using clinical, radiographic, and pathological data, we investigated eighteen cases of early aseptic failure of an implant in patients who had undergone reconstruction of the hip with a Wagner resurfacing prosthesis. Sixteen patients required revision for loosening of the acetabular component, with eight of them also demonstrating loosening of the femoral component. One patient had loosening of the femoral component without failure of the acetabular component, and one patient sustained a femoral neck fracture that was associated with osteonecrosis. Six of the patients with loosening of the acetabular component had an associated significant loss of acetabular bone stock. Loosening was associated with the development of a membrane at the bone-cement interface in all patients. Histological examination of the membrane demonstrated a marked foreign-body response to wear products from the arthroplasty. Bone resorption appeared active at the bone-membrane interface. We concluded that the acetabular component of the Wagner prosthesis is prone to early loosening and that the early loosening is potentiated by a foreign-body response to debris resulting from arthroplastic wear.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1988

The effects of bulk versus particulate polymethylmethacrylate on bone.

Stuart B. Goodman; Victor Fornasier; Kei J

Twenty-one mature New Zealand white female rabbits were allocated into three groups of seven rabbits. Group I received a bolus of doughy Simplex polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) cement injected into the proximal tibia through a drill hole. Group II received a preformed, cooled, bulk PMMA pellet. Group III had particulate PMMA powder implanted. The operated, but nonimplanted, left tibiae served as controls. Animals were killed after four months. Histologically, both Group I and Group II demonstrated a thin, fibrous tissue membrane at the implant interface. Particulate PMMA (Group III) stimulated a much thicker, florid, foreign body reaction composed of histiocytes and giant cells. The foreign body response to particulate acrylic cement was similar to that seen in failed cemented joint replacement arthroplasty in humans.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research | 2001

The peri-implant breast capsule: an immunophenotypic study of capsules taken at explantation surgery.

Mona Kamel; Kalman Protzner; Victor Fornasier; Walter Peters; Dennis C. Smith; Dominique Ibanez

Silicone-based breast implants continue to be the focus of many studies attempting to correlate implant failure to clinical and pathological factors. Routine pathology of peri-implant capsule is extensively described in the literature. The actual significance of the cellular events remains unconfirmed, particularly with reference to clinical outcome. This study reviews our experience with explanted capsules. The study makes specific reference to the immunohistochemistry of the cells participating in the capsule and the significance of the immunophenotypic characterization of these cells to clinical outcome. The use of a wide selection of immunomarkers for T and B lymphocytes and histiocytes provided no supporting evidence for local cell participation in the capsule, which may indicate the presence of an immunological reaction present in the capsule at the time of explantation. One was only able to confirm the presence of a low grade inflammatory process and progression to fibrosis and calcification over time. Statistical correlation was obtained only between Baker grade of capsular contracture and CD3/CD68 immunomarker positivity. CD45RO did show correlation with pain. No correlation was demonstrated with calcification. The results obtained in this study highlighted the need for further investigations into the mechanism of histiocyte and fibrocyte recruitment and activation in the capsule, a possible source of pain and contracture, which is a serious long-term clinical finding leading to the necessity for explantation.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1983

Supervoltage radiotherapy in the treatment of difficult giant cell tumors of bone

R.S. Bell; A.R. Harwood; Stuart B. Goodman; Victor Fornasier

Fifteen patients with giant cell tumor were treated by supervoltage radiotherapy. Each patient had been referred for therapy because adequate surgery would have been difficult or disfiguring. No patient who received appropriate therapy experienced a recurrence, and there were no cases of malignant transformation of a giant cell tumor after a mean follow-up period of 12 years. Radiotherapy is not recommended for primary treatment of giant cell tumor but may be indicated in exceptional circumstances.


Inflammation | 2000

Carrageenan-Induced Arthritis in the Rat

Pauline Hansra; Erica L. Moran; Victor Fornasier; Earl R. Bogoch

This study documents a model of carrageenan-induced chronic inflammatory arthritis in the rat, using quantitative histomorphometric assessment. Ten Sprague-Dawley female rats were randomly assigned to one of two groups. Arthritis was induced in the right tibiofemoral joint by 7 intra-articular injections of 0.02 mL of 1% carrageenan in the arthritic group over 24 days. The control (normal) group was injected with 0.02 mL of saline in the right tibiofemoral joint. Sagittal sections of the right knee joint (distal femur and proximal tibia) were assessed by histomorphometry using the LECO 2001 image analysis system. Articular cartilage thickness, epiphyseal plate thickness, subchondral bone plate thickness, trabecular bone volume and thickness of the synovial lining cell layer were measured. Differences between normal and arthritic groups were statistically significant for articular cartilage thickness of the femur, epiphyseal plate thickness of both the femur and tibia, subchondral bone plate thickness of the tibia and the thickness of the synovial lining cell layer. These findings demonstrate that carrageenan-induced arthritic changes are similar to other, established models of arthritis in the rat.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research | 1998

Effects of polyethylene particles on tissue surrounding knee arthroplasties in rabbits

Daemen Sacomen; R. Lane Smith; Yong Song; Victor Fornasier; Stuart B. Goodman

Clinical studies suggest a role for polyethylene (PE) wear debris in the pathogenesis of osteolysis and loosening of total joint replacements. In this study, submicron particles of ultrahigh molecular weight PE (UHMWPE) were placed around pressfit tibial hemiarthroplasties in rabbits to determine the biological reaction. After 6 months the periprosthetic tissue was harvested and characterized biochemically by measuring the extracellular matrix macromolecules, collagen, and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) and quantifying the expression of inflammatory/osteolytic mediators [prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), hexosaminidase, transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta), and interleukins-6 and -1 (IL-6, IL-1)]. Particle exposure resulted in a decrease in levels of total extracellular matrix molecules including a 53% decrease in total GAG (p < 0.05) and a 74% decrease in total collagen (p < 0.005). Collagen content remained significantly decreased when normalized for cellularity (DNA content). Total TGF beta release exhibited a downward trend (p = 0.06) in the particle exposed group. Hexosaminidase and PGE2 levels did not show a difference between groups; however, when normalized for cellularity, PGE2 values exhibited an upward trend in the particle exposed group (p = 0.1). IL-6 was undetected by bioassay and ELISA. Previous studies emphasized that PE debris enhances the degradation of bone. The data from this in vivo model suggest that submicron UHMWPE particles may also act to inhibit biosynthetic pathways of bone and mesenchymal tissue. Decreased levels of collagen, GAG, and TGF beta expression may indicate suppression of bone formation, possibly through a downregulation of osteoblast activity.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1988

The effects of bulk versus particulate ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene on bone

Stuart B. Goodman; Victor Fornasier; Kei J

Fourteen mature New Zealand white female rabbits underwent implantation of a bulk pellet and of particulate (less than 1,000 micron) ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE), through a drill hole in the proximal right tibia. The left tibia served as a drilled but nonimplanted control. The rabbits were killed after 16 weeks. Histologic examination of the bone-implant interface in the bulk UHMWPE group disclosed a fibrous tissue membrane with infrequent giant cell and histiocytic clusters at surface irregularities. The particulate group demonstrated positively birefringent UHMWPE fragments, rimmed by foreign body giant cells and histiocytes, embedded in a loose connective tissue. The histologic response to particulate UHMWPE is similar to that seen surrounding loose total joint arthroplasties in humans.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1982

Coccygeal glomus tumors: a case of mistaken identity?

R S Bell; Stuart B. Goodman; Victor Fornasier

We undertook an anatomical and histological study to differentiate glomus-cell tumors of the pericoccygeal tissues from the normal coccygeal body. Removal of the coccyx was performed on five consecutive autopsy specimens from patients with no history of coccygeal symptoms. In each specimen, the coccygeal body (glomus coccygeum) was identified grossly and histologically. The histological appearance was indistinguishable from that of photomicrographs published in case reports of patients with glomus tumors of the coccyx. It is likely that the so-called tumors reported previously were in actuality normal glomus bodies.


Endocrine Pathology | 2004

Pituitary pathology in erdheim-chester disease

Kalman Kovacs; Juan M. Bilbao; Victor Fornasier; Eva Horvath

Pituitary morphologic changes in patients with Erdheim-Chester disease have not been described in detail. We report here the histologic and immunohistochemical findings in the autopsy obtained pituitary of a 35-yr-old woman with extensively disseminated Erdheim-Chester disease. The posterior lobe was completely replaced by xanthogranulomatous infiltrates, providing an explanation for the patient’s diabetes insipidus. The anterior lobe was intact and immunohistochemistry demonstrated expression of GH, TSH, FSH, LH, and alpha subunit within the normal range. A clinically observed decrease of anterior pituitary function was interpreted as hypothalamic in origin due to massive destruction of the hypophysial stalk and compression of the hypothalamus. Prolactin immunoreactive cells were numerous, consistent with the view that prolactin cell hyperplasia resulted from the loss of hypothalamic dopaminergic inhibition. Massive Crooke’s hyalinization in the ACTH-producing cells was considered unrelated to Erdheim-Chester disease and was the consequence of treatment with pharmacologic doses of glucocorticoid hormones. It can be concluded that prolactin cell hyperplasia may be the only finding in the adenohypophysis of patients with disseminated Erdheim-Chester disease. It appears that in our patient the clinically apparent anterior hypopituitarism was not due to the lack of storage but rather to insufficient release of adenohypophysial hormones caused by the defect in hypothalamic regulation.


Skeletal Radiology | 2000

Chondromyxoid fibroma of the acromium with soft tissue extension

Denis Macdonald; Victor Fornasier; Richard Holtby

Abstract Chondromyxoid fibroma is an unusual, benign tumor of cartilaginous origin and represents less than 1% of all primary bone tumors. It usually involves the long bones around the knee joint or the flat bones of the pelvis or ribs. Soft tissue extension is also thought to be rare in these lesions. They are usually eccentrically located in the metaphyses of the long bones and centrally in the flat bones. The radiographic appearances are characteristically those of a single, lytic lesion with lobulated margins, septations, cortical expansion and a sclerotic rim. Histologically, they display a lobulated pattern with spindle-shaped cells lying within a myxoid matrix with areas of hyaline cartilage. The differential diagnosis includes giant cell tumor, chondroblastoma or enchondroma as well as chondrosarcoma. The rarity of these lesions may render the diagnosis difficult to make, especially when the lesion involves an unusual site such as the acromium.

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A. Shojaci

St. Michael's Hospital

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Daniel Chen

St. Michael's Hospital

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