172 research outputs found

    Role of VEGF, Nitric Oxide, and Sympathetic Neurotransmitters in the Pathogenesis of Tendinopathy: A Review of the Current Evidences

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    Chronic tendinopathy is a painful common condition affecting athletes as well as the general population undergoing to tendon overuse. Although its huge prevalence, little is known about tendinopathy pathogenesis, and even cloudier is its treatment. Traditionally, tendinopathy has been defined as a lack of tendon ability to overcome stressing stimuli with appropriate adaptive changes. Histologic studies have demonstrated the absence of inflammatory infiltrates, as a consequence conventional antinflammatory drugs have shown little or no effectiveness in treating tendinopathies. New strategies should be therefore identified to address chronic tendon disorders. Angiofibroblastic changes have been highlighted as the main feature of tendinopathy, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been demonstrated as one of the key molecules involved in vascular hyperplasia. More recently, attention has been focused on new peptides such as Substance P, nitric oxide, and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP). Those new findings support the idea of a nerve-mediated disregulation of tendon metabolism. Each of those molecules could be a target for new treatment options. This study aimed to systematically review the current available clinical and basic science in order to summarize the latest evidences on the pathophysiology and its effect on treatment of chronic tendinopathy, and to spread suggestions for future research on its treatment

    Single-Dose Intra-Articular Administration of a Hybrid Cooperative Complex of Sodium Hyaluronate and Sodium Chondroitin in the Treatment of Symptomatic Hip Osteoarthritis: A Single-Arm, Open-Label, Pilot Study

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    INTRODUCTION: Intra-articular (i.a.) hyaluronic acid is an accepted conservative therapy for knee osteoarthritis (OA). This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of a single i.a. injection of an innovative formulation of sodium hyaluronate 2.4% plus sodium chondroitin non-sulphated 1.6% of biotechnological origin (HA-SC) for the treatment of patients with radiographically confirmed symptomatic hip OA and moderate-to-severe pain.METHODS: In this prospective, multicenter, open-label, pilot study, HA-SC was administered using a standard ultrasound-guided procedure. Adverse events, global/local evaluation of tolerability, and use of rescue analgesics were recorded. Efficacy endpoints included visual analogue scale (VAS) measurement of hip pain, changes in Lequesne's algofunctional Index, and assessment of global status.RESULTS: Treatment was well tolerated; adverse device events of moderate-to-severe intensity, most commonly, injection site pain/localized arthralgia occurred in 20.8% of subjects. Global evaluation of tolerability was rated as excellent or good (75.0%), fair (16.7%), and poor (8.3%) by subjects and 77.1, 14.6, and 8.3%, respectively, by investigators. There was a rapid and significant decrease in hip pain after a single injection; VAS pain score decreased from a mean of 67.5mm at baseline to 29.3mm by day 7, with the effects sustained during 6months of follow-up (P<0.0001). There were significant improvements in Lequesne's Index for hip OA total scores at all time points during follow-up (P<0.0001). The majority of subjects reported 'Very much improved' or 'Slightly improved' global improvement at any time point. Use of rescue paracetamol was generally low.CONCLUSIONS: A single i.a. injection of an innovative HA-SC formulation was well tolerated, safe, and effective in the treatment of symptomatic hip OA

    Prevalence of articular cartilage lesions and surgical clinical outcomes in football (soccer) players' knees: a systematic review

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    "Article in Press" ; "Published Online: April 16, 2016"Purpose: To systematize the available scientific literature on the prevalence of articular cartilage and/or osteo- chondral lesions in football (soccer) playersâ knees, and overview the surgical procedures and functional outcomes and return to sports. Methods: A comprehensive search using Pubmed, Cochrane Library, SPORTDiscus, and CINAHL databases was carried out until September 30, 2015. All English language studies that assessed the outcomes of a surgical technique for the treatment of articular cartilage lesions in football playersâ knees, with a minimum follow-up of 12 months, were included. The reference list of the most relevant papers was screened. The main outcomes of interest were the clinical, arthroscopy or imaging primary outcomes and the return to sports rate. The methodological and reporting qualities were assessed according to Coleman methodology score. Results: The search provided 485 titles and abstracts. Five studies were eligible for inclusion (mean Coleman score of 37.2 points), comprising a total of 183 football players with a mean age of 25.7 years. A total of 217 articular cartilage and/or osteochondral lesions were reported, where the medial and lateral femoral condyles were the most common sites of lesion. The surgical procedures investigated were mosaicplasty, microfracture, autologous chondrocyte implantation, and chondral debridement. Conclusions: No definitive conclusion could be made in respect to the best current surgical technique for articular cartilage and osteochondral lesions. Microfracture and mosaicplasty can provide a faster return to competition and faster clinical and functional results, whereas autologous chondrocyte implantation and/or matrix-induced autologous chondrocytes implantation procedures can enhance longstanding clinical and functional results. Level of Evidence: Level IV, systematic review of Level III and IV studies

    Accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging to identify pseudocapsule invasion in renal tumors

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    Purpose: To evaluate accuracy of MRI in detecting renal tumor pseudocapsule (PC) invasion and to propose a classification based on imaging of PC status in patients with renal cell carcinoma. Methods: From January 2017 to June 2018, 58 consecutive patients with localized renal cell carcinoma were prospectively enrolled. MRI was performed preoperatively and PC was classified, according to its features, as follows: MRI-Cap 0 (absence of PC), MRI-Cap 1 (presence of a clearly identifiable PC), MRI-Cap 2 (focally interrupted PC), and MRI-Cap 3 (clearly interrupted and infiltrated PC). A 3D image reconstruction showing MRI-Cap score was provided to both surgeon and pathologist to obtain complete preoperative evaluation and to compare imaging and pathology reports. All patients underwent laparoscopic partial nephrectomy. In surgical specimens, PC was classified according to the renal tumor capsule invasion scoring system (i-Cap). Results: A concordance between MRI-Cap and i-Cap was found in 50/58 (86%) cases. ρ coefficient for each MRI-cap and iCap categories was: MRI-Cap 0: 0.89 (p < 0.0001), MRI-Cap1: 0.75 (p < 0.0001), MRI-Cap 2: 0.76 (p < 0.0001), and MRI-Cap3: 0.87 (p < 0.0001). Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and AUC were: MRI-Cap 0: Se 97.87% Spec 83.3%, PPV 95.8%, NPV 90.9%, and AUC 90.9; MRI-Cap 1: Se 77% Spec 95.5%, PPV 83.3%, NPV 93.5%, and AUC 0.86; MRI-Cap 2- iCap 2: Se 88% Spec 90%, PPV 79%, NPV 95%, and AUC 0.89; MRI-Cap 3: Se 94% Spec 95%, PPV 88%, NPV 97%, and AUC 0.94. Conclusions: MRI-Cap classification is accurate in evaluating renal tumor PC features. PC features can provide an imaging-guided landmark to figure out where a minimal margin could be preferable during nephron-sparing surgery

    Rugby and shoulder trauma: a systematic review

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    Rugby is a popular contact sport worldwide. Collisions and tackles during matches and practices often lead to traumatic injuries of the shoulder. This review reports on the epidemiology of injuries, type of lesions and treatment of shoulder injuries, risk factors, such as player position, and return to sport activities. Electronic searches through PubMed (Medline), EMBASE, and Cochrane Library retrieved studies concerning shoulder injuries in rugby players. Data regarding incidence, type and mechanisms of lesion, risk factors and return to sport were extracted and analyzed. The main reported data were incidence, mechanism of injury and type of lesion. Most of the studies report tackle as the main event responsible for shoulder trauma (between 50% and 85%), while the main lesions reported were Bankart lesions, Superior Labral tear from Anterior to Posterior (SLAP tears), anterior dislocation and rotator cuff tears. Open or arthroscopic repair improve clinical outcomes. Shoulder lesions are common injuries in rugby players. Surgical treatment seems to be effective in for rotator cuff tears and shoulder instability. More and better designed studies are needed for a higher Level of Evidence analysis of this topic

    Micro-fragmented and nanofat adipose tissue derivatives: In vitro qualitative and quantitative analysis

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    Introduction: Adipose tissue is widely exploited in regenerative medicine thanks to its trophic properties, mainly based on the presence of adipose-derived stromal cells. Numerous devices have been developed to promote its clinical use, leading to the introduction of one-step surgical procedures to obtain minimally manipulated adipose tissue derivatives. However, only a few studies compared their biological properties. This study aimed to characterize micro-fragmented (MAT) and nanofat adipose tissue (NAT) obtained with two different techniques.Methods: MAT, NAT and unprocessed lipoaspirate were collected from surgical specimens. RNA extraction and collagenase isolation of stromal vascular fraction (SVF) were performed. Tissue sections were analysed by histological and immunohistochemical (collagen type I, CD31, CD34 and PCNA) staining to assess tissue morphology and cell content. qPCR was performed to evaluate the expression of stemness-related (SOX2, NANOG and OCT3/4), extracellular matrix (COL1A1) and inflammatory genes (IL1β, IL6 and iNOS). Furthermore, multilineage differentiation was assessed following culture in adipogenic and osteogenic media and staining with Oil Red O and Alizarin red. ASC immunophenotype was assessed by flow cytometric analysis of CD90, CD105, CD73 and CD45.Results: Histological and immunohistochemical results showed an increased amount of stroma and a reduction of adipocytes in MAT and NAT, with the latter displaying the highest content of collagen type I, CD31, CD34 and PCNA. From LA to MAT and NAT, an increasing expression of NANOG, SOX2, OCT3/4, COL1A1 and IL6 was noted, while no significant differences in terms of IL1β and iNOS emerged. No statistically significant differences were noted between NAT and SVF in terms of stemness-related genes, while the latter demonstrated a significantly higher expression of stress-related markers. SVF cells derived from all three samples (LA, MAT, and NAT) showed a similar ASC immunoprofile as well as osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation.Discussion: Our results showed that both MAT and NAT techniques allowed the rapid isolation of ASC-rich grafts with a high anabolic and proliferative potential. However, NAT showed the highest levels of extracellular matrix content, replicating cells, and stemness gene expression. These results may provide precious clues for the use of adipose tissue derivatives in the clinical setting

    Bone fragility in patients with diabetes mellitus: A consensus statement from the working group of the Italian Diabetes Society (SID), Italian Society of Endocrinology (SIE), Italian Society of Gerontology and Geriatrics (SIGG), Italian Society of Orthopaedics and Traumatology (SIOT)

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    Bone fragility is one of the possible complications of diabetes, either type 1 (T1D) or type 2 (T2D). Bone fragility can affect patients of different age and with different disease severity depending on type of diabetes, disease duration and the presence of other complications. Fracture risk assessment should be started at different stages in the natural history of the disease depending on the type of diabetes and other risk factors. The risk of fracture in T1D is higher than in T2D, imposing a much earlier screening and therapeutic intervention that should also take into account a patient's life expectancy, diabetes complications etc. The therapeutic armamentarium for T2D has been enriched with drugs that may influence bone metabolism, and clinicians should be aware of these effects.Considering the complexity of diabetes and osteoporosis and the range of variables that influ-ence treatment choices in a given individual, the Working Group on bone fragility in patients with diabetes mellitus has identified and issued recommendations based on the variables that should guide screening of bone fragility and management of diabetes and bone fragility: (A) ge, (B)MD, (C)omplications, (D)uration of disease, & (F)ractures (ABCD&F). Consideration of these parameters may help clinicians identify the best time for screening, the appropriate glycaemic target and anti-osteoporosis drug for patients with diabetes at risk of or with bone fragility.(c)& nbsp;2021 The Italian Diabetes Society, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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