33 research outputs found

    Impact of Covid - 19 Pandemic on Orthopaedics at Northwell Health, New York.

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    The Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemicplaced an immense strain on healthcare systems and orthopedic surgeons across the world. To limit the spread, federal and state governments mandated the cancellation of all non-urgent surgical cases to address surging hospital admissions and manage workforce and resource reallocation. During the pandemic surge, thousands of surgical cancellations have been required. We outline our experience through the onset and advance of the surge, detail our incident response, and discuss the transition toward recovery

    Evaluation of subsidence, chondrocyte survival and graft incorporation following autologous osteochondral transplantation

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    Contains fulltext : 95878.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to evaluate subsidence tendency, surface congruency, chondrocyte survival and plug incorporation after osteochondral transplantation in an animal model. The potential benefit of precise seating of the transplanted osteochondral plug on the recipient subchondral host bone ('bottoming') on these parameters was assessed in particular. METHODS: In 18 goats, two osteochondral autografts were harvested from the trochlea of the ipsilateral knee joint and inserted press-fit in a standardized articular cartilage defect in the medial femoral condyle. In half of the goats, the transplanted plugs were matched exactly to the depth of the recipient hole (bottomed plugs; n = 9), whereas in the other half of the goats, a gap of 2 mm was left between the plugs and the recipient bottom (unbottomed plugs; n = 9). After 6 weeks, all transplants were evaluated on gross morphology, subsidence, histology, and chondrocyte vitality. RESULTS: The macroscopic morphology scored significantly higher for surface congruency in bottomed plugs as compared to unbottomed reconstructions (P = 0.04). However, no differences in histological subsidence scoring between bottomed and unbottomed plugs were found. The transplanted articular cartilage of both bottomed and unbottomed plugs was vital. Only at the edges some matrix destaining, chondrocyte death and cluster formation was observed. At the subchondral bone level, active remodeling occurred, whereas integration at the cartilaginous surface of the osteochondral plugs failed to occur. Subchondral cysts were found in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: In this animal model, subsidence tendency was significantly lower after 'bottomed' versus 'unbottomed' osteochondral transplants on gross appearance, whereas for histological scoring no significant differences were encountered. Since the clinical outcome may be negatively influenced by subsidence, the use of 'bottomed' grafts is recommended for osteochondral transplantation in patients

    Enhancing Biological and Biomechanical Fixation of Osteochondral Scaffold: A Grand Challenge

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    Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative joint disease, typified by degradation of cartilage and changes in the subchondral bone, resulting in pain, stiffness and reduced mobility. Current surgical treatments often fail to regenerate hyaline cartilage and result in the formation of fibrocartilage. Tissue engineering approaches have emerged for the repair of cartilage defects and damages to the subchondral bones in the early stage of OA and have shown potential in restoring the joint's function. In this approach, the use of three-dimensional scaffolds (with or without cells) provides support for tissue growth. Commercially available osteochondral (OC) scaffolds have been studied in OA patients for repair and regeneration of OC defects. However, some controversial results are often reported from both clinical trials and animal studies. The objective of this chapter is to report the scaffolds clinical requirements and performance of the currently available OC scaffolds that have been investigated both in animal studies and in clinical trials. The findings have demonstrated the importance of biological and biomechanical fixation of the OC scaffolds in achieving good cartilage fill and improved hyaline cartilage formation. It is concluded that improving cartilage fill, enhancing its integration with host tissues and achieving a strong and stable subchondral bone support for overlying cartilage are still grand challenges for the early treatment of OA

    Meniscal tear—a feature of osteoarthritis

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    Editorial Commentary: Shoulder Repair All-Suture Fixators: Anchors Away or Tell Us Why Not?

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    © 2019 Arthroscopy Association of North America The current array of shoulder repair anchors, techniques, and constructs vary greatly and offer many choices to optimize soft-tissue healing to bone. The widely used all-suture anchor designs represent an innovative option that allows for versatile delivery and a low-profile anchor construct that minimizes bone drilling and preserves native bone. Various reports of tissue reactions to copolymer and biocomposite materials and now all-suture anchors have been published raising concerns in some cases over safety, adverse events, and clinical performance. Other studies have described reactions in which the clinical correlative significance remains unclear. Determination of what matters and what is significant will help to decide if radiographic tunnel enlargement does occur over time and if it changes our clinical decision-making and choice of which anchors to use

    Meniscus Foreword

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    An abstract reasoning architecture for privacy policies monitoring

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    Privacy is a topic of increasing interest not only for scientific communities, but also for public opinion and for regulatory bodies from all Countries. The problem is that privacy management and enforcement are very dynamic activities and monitoring known fallacies of systems is really difficult, since their number grows up day by day. Moreover, monitoring systems for yet unknown vulnerabilities is, of course, even more difficult. Here we want to present a model and an architecture, based on semantics and reasoning, which is able to detect privacy problems by abstract reasoning on monitored information. The methodology we present here fetches data and evidences from logs and other files, applying model transformation techniques in order to populate semantics repository for enacting reasoning actions. We provide here some experimental results in order to prove the strength of the proposed approach. © 202

    Current Strategies and Approaches to Meniscal Repair

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    Repair of symptomatic meniscal tears in the appropriate patient has demonstrated successful mid and long-term results with a variety of different repair techniques. These techniques have undergone much evolution and innovation, from the initial open repairs to a variety of inside-out, outside-in, and all-inside techniques and devices. This article focuses on patient presentation, selection, current treatments, and surgical techniques including pearls and pitfalls, and discusses the most recent published outcomes and complications

    Meniscal Scaffolds

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    There are two scaffold products designed for meniscal reconstruction or substitution of partial meniscal defects that are currently available in the Europe: the collagen meniscal implant (CMI; Ivy Sports Medicine, Grafelfing, Germany) and the polymer scaffold (PS; Actifit, Orteq Bioengineering, London, United Kingdom). The CMI has demonstrated improved clinical outcomes compared with baseline in patients with chronic postmeniscectomy symptoms with follow-up ranging from 5 to more than 10 years. There are also several comparative studies that report improved clinical scores in patients with chronic medial meniscus symptoms treated with CMI versus repeat partial meniscectomy, and a lower reoperation rate. Recently, PS insertion was shown to result in improved clinical outcomes in patients with chronic postmeniscectomy symptoms of the medial or lateral meniscus at short-term follow-up. However, there is currently no medium-or long-term data available for the PS. The use of meniscal scaffolds in the acute setting has not been found to result in improved outcomes in most studies. The authors\u27 surgical indications for meniscal scaffold implantation, preferred surgical technique, and postoperative rehabilitation protocol are described
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