JOSE RICARDO PECORA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
24
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto de Ortopedia e Traumatologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/41 - Laboratório de Investigação Médica do Sistema Músculoesquelético, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 3 de 3
  • article 12 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Development of a Fresh Osteochondral Allograft Program Outside North America
    (2016) TIRICO, Luis Eduardo Passarelli; DEMANGE, Marco Kawamura; SANTOS, Luiz Augusto Ubirajara; REZENDE, Marcia Uchoa de; HELITO, Camilo Partezani; GOBBI, Riccardo Gomes; PECORA, Jose Ricardo; CROCI, Alberto Tesconi; BUGBEE, William Dick
    Objective. To standardize and to develop a fresh osteochondral allograft protocol of procurement, processing and surgical utilization in Brazil. This study describes the steps recommended to make fresh osteochondral allografts a viable treatment option in a country without previous fresh allograft availability. Design. The process involves regulatory process modification, developing and establishing procurement, and processing and surgical protocols. Results. Legislation: Fresh osteochondral allografts were not feasible in Brazil until 2009 because the law prohibited preservation of fresh grafts at tissue banks. We approved an amendment that made it legal to preserve fresh grafts for 30 days from 2 degrees C to 6 degrees C in tissue banks. Procurement: We changed the protocol of procurement to decrease tissue contamination. All tissues were procured in an operating room. Processing: Processing of the grafts took place within 12 hours of tissue recovery. A serum-free culture media with antibiotics was developed to store the grafts. Surgeries: We have performed 8 fresh osteochondral allografts on 8 knees obtaining grafts from 5 donors. Mean preoperative International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) score was 31.99 +/- 13.4, improving to 81.26 +/- 14.7 at an average of 24 months' follow-up. Preoperative Knee Injury and Oseoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) score was 46.8 +/- 20.9 and rose to 85.24 +/- 13.9 after 24 months. Mean preoperative Merle D'Aubigne-Postel score was 8.75 +/- 2.25 rising to 16.1 +/- 2.59 at 24 months' follow-up. Conclusion. To our knowledge, this is the first report of fresh osteochondral allograft transplantation in South America. We believe that this experience may be of value for physicians in countries that are trying to establish an osteochondral allograft transplant program.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Anatomical Risk Factors for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Are Not Important As Patellar Instability Risk Factors in Patients with Acute Knee Injury
    (2022) GOBBI, Riccardo Gomes; VIDEIRA, Livia Dau; SANTOS, Anderson Albuquerque dos; SARUHASHI, Marcello Barni; LUCARINI, Bruno Romano; FERNANDES, Renan Jose Rodrigues; GIGLIO, Pedro Nogueira; PECORA, Jose Ricardo; CAMANHO, Gilberto Luis; HINCKEL, Betina Bremer
    To compare in magnetic resonance imaging the anatomical risk factors for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury and patellar dislocation among patients who suffered acute knee injury, 105 patients with acute knee injury resulting in 38 patellar dislocations (patella group), 35 ACL injuries (ACL group), and 32 meniscus or medial collateral ligament injuries (control group) were included. These groups were compared for risk factors for patellar dislocation (patellar height, trochlear dysplasia, and quadriceps angle of action) and for ACL injury (intercondylar width, posterior inclination of tibial plateaus, and depth of the medial plateau). Univariate analysis found statistically significant differences ( p <0.05) between the patella and ACL groups in patellar height (Caton-Deschamps [CD] 1.23 vs. 1.07), trochlear facet asymmetry (55 vs. 68%), PTTG (13.08 vs. 8.01mm), and the patellar tip and trochlear groove (PTTG) angle (29.5 vs. 13.71 degrees). The patella group also differed from control in medial plateau inclination (4.8 vs. 1.87 degrees), patellar height (CD 1.23 vs 1.08), trochlear facet asymmetry (55 vs. 69%), lateral trochlear inclination (17.11 vs. 20.65 degrees), trochlear depth (4.1 vs. 6.05mm), PTTG (13.08 vs. 9.85mm), and the PTTG angle (29.5 vs. 17.88 degrees). The ACL and control groups were similar in all measures. Multivariate analysis found the following significant determinants between the Patella and Control groups: patellar height (CD index, odds ratio [OR]: 80.13, p =0.015), trochlear anatomy (asymmetry of facets M/L, OR: 1.06, p =0.031) and quadriceps action angle (PTTG angle, OR: 1.09, p =0.016); between the ACL and control groups: PTTG angle (OR: 0.936, p =0.04) and female gender (OR: 3.876, p =0.032); and between the patella and ACL groups, the CD index (OR: 67.62, p =0.026), asymmetry of the M/L facets (OR: 1.07, p =0.011) and PTTG angle (OR: 1.16, p <0.001). In conclusion, in patients with acute knee injury, the anatomical factors patellar height, trochlear dysplasia, and quadriceps angle of action were related to the occurrence of patellar dislocation. None of the anatomical factors studied was related to the occurrence of anterior cruciate ligament injury.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The Vastus Medialis Insertion Is More Proximal and Medial in Patients With Patellar Instability: A Magnetic Resonance Imaging Case-Control Study
    (2019) GOBBI, Riccardo Gomes; HINCKEL, Betina Bremer; TEIXEIRA, Paulo Renan Lima; GIGLIO, Pedro Nogueira; LUCARINI, Bruno Romano; PECORA, Jose Ricardo; CAMANHO, Gilberto Luis; DEMANGE, Marco Kawamura
    Background: The anatomy and function of the quadriceps muscle play a role in patellofemoral stability. Few studies have evaluated anatomic differences in the vastus medialis between patients with and without patellar instability. Purpose: To compare the anatomy of the vastus medialis using magnetic resonance imaging in patients with patellar instability to a control group. Study Design: Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: A group of patients with patellar instability were sex-matched with a control group with anterior cruciate ligament tears, meniscal injuries, or sprains; patients younger than 15 years were excluded. The anatomy of the vastus medialis was examined by the distance between the distal origin of the vastus medialis in the femur and the medial femoral condyle, the distance from the proximal pole of the patella to the most distal insertion of the muscle and its ratio to the length of the articular surface of the patella, and a qualitative description of the insertion position of the muscle fibers (directly in the patella or the medial retinaculum). Results: Both groups comprised 78 knees (48 female; 61.5%). The mean age in the control and patellar instability groups was 30.2 +/- 7.8 years and 25.6 +/- 7.5 years, respectively (P = .001). The distance from the vastus origin to the condyle was 27.52 +/- 3.49 mm and 26.59 +/- 3.43 mm, respectively (P = .041); the distance from the proximal pole of the patella to the most distal muscle insertion was 17.59 +/- 5.54 mm and 15.02 +/- 4.18 mm, respectively (P < .001); and the ratio of this distance to the joint surface was 0.586 +/- 0.180 and 0.481 +/- 0.130, respectively (P < .001). In 75.6% of knees in the patellar instability group, the insertion of the vastus was into the medial retinaculum and not into the patella compared with 52.6% in the control group (P = .003; odds ratio, 2.8). Conclusion: The distal insertion of the vastus medialis differed in knees with patellar instability, with a more proximal insertion and less patellar coverage relative to controls, and was more frequently found in the retinaculum instead of directly in the patella.