10 results on '"Greco, Nicholas"'
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2. Outcome reporting patterns in total knee arthroplasty: A systematic review
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Vajapey, Sravya P., Morris, Jesse, Spitzer, Andrew I., Glassman, Andrew H., Greco, Nicholas J., and Li, Mengnai
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- 2020
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3. Direct Anterior Approach and Perioperative Fracture With a Single-Taper Wedge Femoral Component.
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Greco, Nicholas J., Lombardi, Adolph V., Morris, Michael J., Hobbs, Gerald R., Berend, Keith R., and Lombardi, Adolph V Jr
- Abstract
Background: Despite growing interest in direct anterior approach total hip arthroplasty, perioperative femoral fracture and early aseptic loosening are increasingly recognized complications. Previous research has documented the role of surgeon experience in association with these femoral complications. The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between femoral component design and early periprosthetic femoral complications.Methods: This was an extension of previous work with an updated patient cohort of 5090 consecutive direct anterior primary total hip arthroplasties at a single institution with a single-taper, wedge femoral stem comprising 4 variants involving length and geometry: group 1, full-length, standard profile; group 2, full-length, reduced distal profile; group 3, short-length, standard profile; and group 4, short-length, reduced distal profile. Records were reviewed retrospectively for the incidence of early postoperative periprosthetic fracture or aseptic loosening and analyzed with regard to patient demographics and femoral stem type.Results: There were 42 (0.83%) periprosthetic femur complications observed in the early postoperative period. Increased age (P < .001) and female gender (P = .023) were significantly associated with incidence of femoral complications in univariate analysis, while age maintained this significant relationship in multivariate analysis (P < .001). There was a trend toward increased complication rate in patients receiving a short stem with full profile taper (1.27%, P = .0539).Conclusion: Despite an overall low rate of femoral complications after direct anterior total hip arthroplasty, the risk is increased in elderly patients and females. Furthermore, femoral stem design may portend an elevated risk of these complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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4. Polyethylene liner dislocation of fixed-bearing medial oxinium unicompartmental arthroplasty with severe metallosis
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Greco, Nicholas and Berend, Keith
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- 2018
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5. "Thicker" Polyethylene Bearings Are Not Associated With Higher Failure Rates in Primary Total Knee Arthroplasty.
- Author
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Greco, Nicholas J., Crawford, David A., Berend, Keith R., Adams, Joanne B., Jr.Lombardi, Adolph V., and Lombardi, Adolph V Jr
- Abstract
Background: Despite improvements in polyethylene bearing surface properties, only 1 previous study has examined the results of larger thickness bearings. The purpose of this study was to determine whether polyethylene thickness influenced patient outcomes and implant survival following modular total knee arthroplasty.Methods: A retrospective review was performed of patients undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty from 2003 to 2014 in a single practice database. Patients were separated into "thin" and "thick" polyethylene groups based on manufacturer polyethylene bearing sizes of 14 mm or less compared to those greater than 14 mm, respectively. Patient clinical outcomes, need for revision surgery, and overall implant survival rates were evaluated.Results: A total of 6698 primary knee arthroplasties were included, and a thin bearing was used in 96.5% of these cases. Preoperatively, patients with a thick bearing had significantly lower Knee Society clinical scores (P < .01), a trend toward lower functional scores (P = .06), and more significant coronal plane deformity. Postoperatively, patients with thick bearings exhibited better Knee Society clinical and pain scores as well as similar functional scores and University of California at Los Angeles activity scores. The overall reoperation rate and 10-year survivorship free of revision were similar between thick and thin bearings (1.7% vs 2.3%; 98.2% vs 96.1%). Patients with thin bearings were twice as likely to require a manipulation under anesthesia postoperatively (P = .02), while there were no failures in the thick bearing group due to aseptic loosening or instability.Conclusion: Patients with thick polyethylene bearings performed similarly or better in multiple clinical outcomes and survivorship compared to those with thin bearings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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6. Medial Mobile-Bearing Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty in Young Patients Aged Less Than or Equal to 50 Years.
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Greco, Nicholas J., Jr.Lombardi, Adolph V., Price, Andrew J., Berend, Michael E., Berend, Keith R., and Lombardi, Adolph V Jr
- Abstract
Background: Contemporary research has shown medial mobile-bearing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty to be an effective treatment in patients younger than 60 years; however, only one other study has specifically investigated unicompartmental arthroplasty outcomes in patients 50 years or younger. The purpose of this study was to determine the clinical outcomes and survivorship of medial mobile-bearing unicompartmental arthroplasty in this younger patient population.Methods: A retrospective review of patients undergoing primary unicompartmental knee arthroplasty using the Oxford partial knee from 2003 to 2014 in a single practice database was performed. Patients were included in the study if they were 50 years of age or younger with a primary diagnosis of anteromedial osteoarthritis and minimum clinical follow-up of 2 years. Patient clinical outcomes, function, and need for revision surgery were assessed.Results: The study included 340 knees. Average patient age was 46.5 years, and the mean follow-up was 6.1 years. Patients demonstrated significant improvements (P < .05) in range of motion (114.5 v 116.9), University of California Los Angeles activity score (4.4 vs 5.6), Knee Society clinical (37.3 vs 86.5) and functional scores (58.8 v 79.8). Overall, 20 patients required reoperation, and the predicted survival rate was 96% at 6 years and 86% at 10 years. Aseptic loosening occurred in 7 patients at an average of 5.6 years postoperatively, while 4 patients required conversion to total knee arthroplasty because of arthritic progression at a mean time of 6.6 years. There were no revision procedures required due to polyethylene liner wear or breakage.Conclusion: Medial mobile-bearing unicompartmental arthroplasty should be considered as a treatment option in patients younger than 50 years of age suffering from anteromedial osteoarthritis of the knee. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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7. Model-Based Tracking of the Hip: Implications for Novel Analyses of Hip Pathology.
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Martin, Daniel E., Greco, Nicholas J., Klatt, Brian A., Wright, Vonda J., Anderst, William J., and Tashman, Scott
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Abstract: This study investigated the efficacy of a combined high-speed, biplane radiography and model-based tracking technique to study hip joint kinematics and arthrokinematics. Comparing model-based tracking to the gold standard of radiostereometric analysis using implanted metal beads, joint translation was measured with a bias of 0.2 mm and a precision of 0.3 mm, whereas joint rotation was measured with a bias of 0.2° and a precision of 0.8°. A novel measure of hip arthrokinematics characterizing the region of closest contact in the anterosuperior acetabulum was measured with a bias of 0.9% and a precision of 2.5%. Model-based tracking of the hip thus provides the opportunity to noninvasively study hip pathologic conditions such as osteoarthritis and femoroacetabular impingement with great accuracy. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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8. Furan decorated nucleoside analogues as fluorescent probes: synthesis, photophysical evaluation, and site-specific incorporation
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Greco, Nicholas J. and Tor, Yitzhak
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FLUORESCENCE spectroscopy , *MOLECULAR probes , *NUCLEOTIDES , *NUCLEIC acids - Abstract
Abstract: The synthesis and photophysical evaluation of modified nucleoside analogues in which a five-membered heterocycle (furan, thiophene, oxazole, and thiazole) is attached to the 5-position of 2′-deoxyuridine are reported. The furan-containing derivative is identified as the most promising responsive nucleoside of this family due to its emission quantum efficiency and degree of sensitivity to its microenvironment. The furan moiety was then attached to the 5-position of 2′-deoxycytidine as well as the 8-position of adenosine and guanosine. Photophysical evaluation of these four furan-containing nucleoside analogues reveals distinct differences in the absorption, emission, and quantum efficiency depending upon the class of nucleoside (pyrimidine or purine). Comparing the photophysical properties of all furan-containing nucleosides, identifies the furan thymidine analogue, 5-(fur-2-yl)-2′-deoxyuridine, as the best candidate for use as a responsive fluorescent probe in nucleic acids. 5-(Fur-2-yl)-2′-deoxyuridine was then converted to the corresponding phosphoramidite and site specifically incorporated into DNA oligonucleotides with greater than 88% coupling efficiency. Such furan-modified oligonucleotides form stable duplexes upon hybridization to their complementary DNA strands and display favorable fluorescent features. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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9. Direct Comparison of Umbilical Cord Blood versus Bone Marrow–Derived Endothelial Precursor Cells in Mediating Neovascularization in Response to Vascular Ischemia
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Finney, Marcie R., Greco, Nicholas J., Haynesworth, Stephen E., Martin, Joseph M., Hedrick, David P., Swan, Jimmy Z., Winter, Daniel G., Kadereit, Suzanne, Joseph, Matthew E., Fu, Pingfu, Pompili, Vincent J., and Laughlin, Mary J.
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UMBILICAL cord , *BONE marrow , *COMPARATIVE studies , *IMMUNODEFICIENCY - Abstract
Abstract: Endothelial precursor cells (EPCs) cultured from adult bone marrow (BM) have been shown to mediate neovasculogenesis in murine models of vascular injury. We sought to directly compare umbilical cord blood (UCB)- and BM-derived EPC surface phenotypes and in vivo functional capacity. UCB and BM EPCs derived from mononuclear cells (MNC) were phenotyped by surface staining for expression of stromal (Stro-1, CXCR4, CD105, and CD73), endothelial (CD31, CD146, and vascular endothelial [VE]-cadherin), stem cell (CD34 and CD133), and monocyte (CD14) surface markers and analyzed by flow cytometry. The nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency murine model of hind-limb ischemia was used to analyze the potential of MNCs and culture-derived EPCs from UCB and BM to mediate neovasculogenesis. Histologic evaluation of the in vivo studies included capillary density as a measure of neovascularization. Surface CXCR4 expression was notably higher on UCB-derived EPCs (64.29% ± 7.41%) compared with BM (19.69% ± 5.49%; P = .021). Although the 2 sources of EPCs were comparable in expression of endothelial and monocyte markers, BM-derived EPCs contained higher proportions of cells expressing stromal cell markers (CD105 and CD73). Injection of UCB- or BM-derived EPCs resulted in significantly improved perfusion as measured by laser Doppler imaging at days 7 and 14 after femoral artery ligation in nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency mice compared with controls (P < .05). Injection of uncultured MNCs from BM or UCB showed no significant difference from control mice (P = .119; P = .177). Tissue samples harvested from the lower calf muscle at day 28 demonstrated increased capillary densities in mice receiving BM- or UCB-derived EPCs. In conclusion, we found that UCB and BM-derived EPCs differ in CXCR4 expression and stromal surface markers but mediate equivalent neovasculogenesis in vivo as measured by Doppler flow and histologic analyses. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2006
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10. Weak platelet agonists and U46619 induce apoptosis-like events in platelets, in the absence of phosphatidylserine exposure
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Tonon, Giovanni, Luo, Xunyi, Greco, Nicholas J., Chen, Weidong, Shi, Yufang, and Jamieson, Graham A.
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BLOOD platelets , *APOPTOSIS , *PHOSPHATIDYLSERINES - Abstract
Platelets express apoptotic markers during storage, while aging and after stimulation with strong agonists thrombin and collagen. It is unknown if the weak agonists ADP and epinephrine or U46619, a thromboxane analog, induce the expression of apoptotic markers in platelets. To answer this question, we measured phosphatidylserine exposure, gelsolin cleavage and decrease in membrane mitochondrial potential after stimulation with these agonists. No phosphatidylserine exposure was evident, however, gelsolin cleavage and a platelet population with a decreased membrane mitochondrial potential appeared, suggesting that in platelets selective agonists can induce apoptosis in the absence of phosphatidylserine exposure. Interestingly, costimulation by thrombin plus collagen together with each of the other agonists increased the phosphatidylserine exposure induced by strong agonists. These findings may be of importance in platelet activation and apoptosis under pathophysiological conditions where multiple effectors are involved. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2002
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