0000000000267466

AUTHOR

Giuseppe Rinonapoli

showing 2 related works from this author

The Advantages of Type III Scaphoid Nonunion Advanced Collapse (SNAC) Treatment With Partial Carpal Arthrodesis in the Dominant Hand: Results of 5-ye…

2018

Introduction The SNAC wrist (Scaphoid nonunion advanced collapse) is one of the complications following scaphoid fractures treated conservatively and one of the causes of wrist arthritis that the hand surgeon has to face most frequently. In these cases surgical management is usually warranted. Materials and methods In the set time frame of 6 years we treated 15 SNAC wrist cases. On average patients underwent surgery five years after the trauma. All patients were treated via dorsal incision with partial carpal arthrodesis and total scaphoidectomy, associated with denervation of the posterior interosseous nerves. A plaster cast was applied to all patients for 3 weeks postoperatively. In the p…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyTime Factors5 year follow upSNAC wristRadiographyArthrodesismedicine.medical_treatmentScaphoid nonunionArthrodesiscarpal fusionhand outcome030230 surgeryWrist03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineTime framescaphoid nonunionmedicineHumansFracture HealingScaphoid BoneOriginal Paper030222 orthopedicsbusiness.industryVisual Analog Pain ScaleGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedSurgerybody regionsmedicine.anatomical_structureScaphoid boneFractures UnunitedFemalebusinessFollow-Up StudiesMedical Archives
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The challenges of monoaxial bone transport in orthopedics and traumatology

2017

Background. Bone defects represent the main challenging problem for the orthopedic surgeon and, consequently, they increase the duration of hospitalization, risk of complications and health expenditures. The aim of our observational, descriptive and retrospective study is to evaluate the outcomes of patients treated with a mo­nolateral external fixator for bone defects greater than 3 cm. Material and methods. Between January 2003 and January 2013, 21 patients were treated at our center by bone transfer with a monolateral external fixator. The main etiologies were trauma in 17 cases (80.9%) and tumors in 4 cases (19.1%). Mean follow-up was 5 years for non-union and 3 years for tumors. Our cl…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentExternal Fixatorsmedicine.medical_treatmentMonolateral external fixationTraumatologyIlizarov TechniqueBone NailsBone InfectionBone defects; Bone infection; Bone transport; Monolateral external fixation; Skeletal tumor;03 medical and health sciencesExternal fixationYoung Adult0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineOrthopedic ProceduresRetrospective StudiesSkeletal tumorbusiness.industryRehabilitationBone transportRetrospective cohort studyMiddle AgedSurgeryTibial FracturesOrthopedicsTreatment OutcomeAmputationTraumatology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisOrthopedic surgeryObservational studyFemaleSplint (medicine)businessBone defects030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBone infection
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