9 results on '"El Amiri L"'
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2. Incidences Skyline View fluoroscopiques du radius distal — extension/pronation versus flexion/supination
- Author
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El Amiri, L., primary, Igeta, Y., additional, Hidalgo Diaz, J.J., additional, Facca, S., additional, and Liverneaux, P., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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3. Articular fracture of the distal humerus classified Dubberley 2b: Case report of two patients and review of the literature.
- Author
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Fouché R, El Amiri L, Bestandji N, and Uzel AP
- Abstract
Articular fractures of the distal humerus are rare, and even rarer are fractures involving the trochlea and capitellum in a single fragment, with no associated comminution. These fractures are classified as 2a according to the Dubberley classification and are rarely described in the literature. Two cases of Dubberley 2a fractures were treated at our hospital. The first case, involving a 68-year-old patient, was treated with a medial and a lateral approach, combined with posteroanterior fixation using 3 Herbert screws. In the 2nd case, a 16-year-old male was treated with a single lateral approach, permitting fixation with two Herbert screws. One of the two screws is inserted into the bone at the edge of the cartilage, with an anteroposterior trajectory that leaves the cartilage intact. We opted mainly for posteroanterior screw fixation in subchondral bone, which is less damaging to articular cartilage and soft tissues and has already demonstrated its reliability. No associated lesions were found, and no complications were encountered. Results were excellent, with Mayo Elbow Performance Index (MEPI) scores of 95 and 100 respectively. Herbert screw fixation therefore appears to be an option of choice for these fractures, although comparative studies are needed to evaluate the different treatments available., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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4. High infection control rate after systematic one-stage procedure for shoulder arthroplasty chronic infection.
- Author
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El Amiri L, Clavert P, Gaudias J, Klein S, Rondé Oustau C, and Antoni M
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Persistent Infection, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Reoperation adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Shoulder adverse effects, Prosthesis-Related Infections epidemiology, Prosthesis-Related Infections etiology, Prosthesis-Related Infections surgery, Shoulder Joint, Arthritis, Infectious surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: The two stage revision procedure is the gold standard surgical technique in chronic shoulder periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). Series of one stage revision have been published with similar outcomes but with preoperative selection of patients. The aim of this work was to report the outcomes (infection eradication, functional, and radiographic) after systematic one stage revision, without preoperative selection of patients, in chronic shoulder PJI., Methods: This was a retrospective monocentric study including 40 patients (14 women and 26 men) with a diagnosis of periprosthetic joint infection after a shoulder arthroplasty. A one stage shoulder prosthesis revision was performed in all patients, for a PJI evolving for more than three weeks, without preoperative patient selection. The primary endpoint was the absence of signs of persistent infection at a minimum follow-up of two years. Secondary endpoints were clinical and radiological outcomes., Results: At the last follow-up, 36/40 patients had no recurrence of infection after the one stage revision, i.e., 90% of our series. In 45% (18/40) of the cases, the microbial organism was not known at the time of the one stage revision. Cutibacterium acnes was the most frequent pathogen, found in 67.5% (27/40) of the patients. The infection was polymicrobial in 40% (16/40) of the cases. At last follow-up, mean absolute Constant score was 48.4% (16-93) and weighted score was 65.5% (22-100), and satisfaction was evaluated by the patients as excellent or good in 75% (30/40). About 20% (8/40) of the patients had a postoperative complication., Conclusion: A one stage revision procedure, combined with appropriate antibiotic therapy, made it possible to eradicate the PJI in 90% of the shoulders in our series with satisfactory functional outcomes., (© 2023. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to SICOT aisbl.)
- Published
- 2023
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5. Methods of assessment of the level of surgeons for minimally invasive fixation of distal radius fractures: "expertise" versus "performance".
- Author
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Ducournau F, El Amiri L, Vernet P, Sapa MC, and Liverneaux P
- Subjects
- Humans, Fracture Fixation, Internal methods, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures methods, Bone Plates, Treatment Outcome, Wrist Fractures, Radius Fractures surgery, Surgeons
- Abstract
Introduction: The results of surgical techniques vary depending on the level of the surgeon's experience. The level of expertise can be evaluated quantitatively or qualitatively. In this study, we evaluated the duration of the procedure and the size of the incision of minimally invasive fixation of distal radius fractures as a means of grading expertise and surgical performance. The null hypothesis of our study was that the level of expertise did not match the level of performance., Material and Methods: The study included 52 surgeons split in five levels of expertise who had performed 467 minimally invasive fixations of distal radius fractures. The performance of the surgeons in terms of duration of the procedure and size of the incision were scored according to the five levels of surgical experience using four different methodologies: clinical (setting limits compared to data found in literature), statistical (setting statistical limits of comparison in percentiles (20th, 40th, 60th, 80th) for each of the two parameters measured), arithmetical (setting limits compared to equal intervals for each of the 2 variables), and success rate (setting a threshold for each of the 2 variables)., Results: Our results showed a great disparity between levels of experience depending on the method used. The scores for levels 1 and 2 were 72% for expertise, 13% for performance according to the clinical method, 75% for the statistical method, 0% for the arithmetical method, and 57% according the success rate. The rate of level 3 was 23% for expertise, 41% for performance by the clinical method, 17% by the statistical method, 17% by the arithmetical method, and 15% by the success rate. The rates of levels 4 and 5 were 5% for expertise, 46% for performance clinical method, 8% by the statistical method, 83% by the arithmetical method, and 28% by the success rate., Discussion: The null hypothesis of our study was confirmed by the results which show that there was no correlation between levels of expertise and performance. The clinical method of assessment appears to reflect best the true level of performance of the surgeon., Conclusion: Publications reporting the results of a surgical technique for a given pathology should always mention the level of performance as measured on a clinical scale., (© 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to SICOT aisbl.)
- Published
- 2023
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6. Pullout strength of connected pins in hand surgery: Effect of pin diameter and insertion angle.
- Author
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Elhassan L, El Amiri L, Braymand S, Bahlouli N, Facca S, Sapa MC, and Liverneaux P
- Subjects
- Humans, Bone Nails, External Fixators, Friction, Biomechanical Phenomena, Hand surgery, Fractures, Bone surgery
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of insertion angles on the pullout strength of connected pins using a synthetic model simulating a hand bone., Material and Methods: The material consisted of Sawbones® (20 mm×20 mm × 60 mm), fixation pins secured to a connecting rod much like an external fixator, an electric drill (speed 1,290 rpm) and a tensile testing machine. The Sawbones® were drilled with different pin diameters (1.2 mm, 1.5 mm, and 1.8 mm) and insertion angles (100°, 110° and 120°). A vertical displacement of 1 mm/min was applied until the pins were extracted (maximum force)., Results: The pullout strength increased with the insertion angle of the connected pins. It also increased with their diameter. Regardless of the pin diameter, the load-displacement curve during the pullout test had 4 sections (peak 1, ascending slope, peak 2, descending slope) that corresponded to the combined frictional force and contact force between the pins and Sawbones®., Discussion: Our study findings showed that, theoretically, for wrist or hand fractures treated with connected pins, the larger the diameter and insertion angle, the better the mechanical holding power of the pins., Level of Evidence: I, experimental study., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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7. Anterior plating technique for distal radius: comparing performance after learning through naive versus deliberate practice.
- Author
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Cafarelli L, El Amiri L, Facca S, Chakfé N, Sapa MC, and Liverneaux P
- Subjects
- Clinical Competence, Fracture Fixation, Internal, Humans, Learning Curve, Internship and Residency, Radius
- Abstract
Background: Surgical teaching is most often carried out in the operating theatre through mentorship, and the performance of surgical procedures is rarely measured. The objective of this article is to compare the progression in learning curves of junior surgeons trained in the anterior plating technique for the distal radius on a nonbiological model according to three different methods., Methods: The materials comprised 12 junior surgeons of level 1 or 2 (as per Tang and Giddins) divided into three groups: control (G1), naive practice (G2), and deliberate practice (G3). The three groups watched a demonstration video of a level 5 expert. The four G1 surgeons (two level 1 and two level 2) saw the video only once, and each inserted five plates. The four G2 surgeons (two level 1 and two level 2) inserted five plates and watched the video before each time. The four G3 surgeons (two level 1 and two level 2) saw the video before the first plate insertion. Before posing the subsequent four plates, the four G3 surgeons watched their own video, and the expert indicated their errors and how to avoid them next time. A 12-criteria OSATS defined on the basis of the 60 videos, each graded from one (min.) to five (max.), was used to measure the objective surgical performance per plating (min. 12; max. 60) and per series of five plate fixations (min. 60, max. 300)., Results: The total average objective performance of G1 was 44.73, of G2 was 50.57 and of G3 was 54.35. Change in objective performance was better for G3 (13.25) than G2 (5) or G1 (3.75). For all groups, the progression in objective performance was better amongst level 1 surgeons (9) than level 2 surgeons (5.6)., Conclusion: Surgical teaching is based on mentorship and experience. However, since "see one, practice many, do one" has started to replace "see one, do one, teach one", learning techniques have increasingly relied on procedure simulators. Against this background, few studies have looked at measuring the performance of surgical procedures and improved learning curves. Our results appear to suggest that deliberate practice, when used in addition to mentorship, is the best option for shortening the growth phase of the learning curve and improving performance. Deliberate practice is a learning technique for surgical procedures that is complementary to mentorship and experience, which allows the growth phase of the learning curve to be shortened and the objective performance of junior surgeons to be improved., (© 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to SICOT aisbl.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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8. Correction to: Distal radius fluoroscopic skyline view: extension-supination versus flexion-supination.
- Author
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El Amiri L, Igeta Y, Pizza C, Facca S, Hidalgo Diaz JJ, and Liverneaux P
- Abstract
The original version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake and has been corrected. First and last names of the author were interchanged. The correct author name is given below.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Distal radius fluoroscopic skyline view: extension-supination versus flexion-supination.
- Author
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El Amiri L, Igeta Y, Pizza C, Facca S, Hidalgo Diaz JJ, and Philippe L
- Subjects
- Fluoroscopy methods, Fracture Fixation, Internal, Humans, Observer Variation, Open Fracture Reduction, Supination, Wrist Joint anatomy & histology, Anatomic Landmarks diagnostic imaging, Radius Fractures diagnostic imaging, Radius Fractures surgery, Wrist Joint diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The aim of our study was to compare the vertical fluoroscopic view of the wrist in extension and supination (ES) to the view in flexion and supination (FS) and determine which of the two views allowed the best visualization of four selected anatomical landmarks SDLR (radial styloid, dorsal radius cortex, Lister's tubercle and distal radioulnar joint). Our case series included 50 patients who had suffered a distal radius fracture and undergone an open reduction and internal fixation procedure with a volar locking plate. For each case, two fluoroscopic views were taken: ES (wrist extension and supination) (group I) and FS (wrist flexion and supination) (group II). Ten observers had to recognize the SDLR anatomical landmarks on 100 fluoroscopic skyline views (time 1) and 15 days later (time 2). The rate of recognition of the four anatomical landmarks was 78% in group I and 66% in group II (p < 0.001). The concordance rate of recognition of the four anatomical landmarks was mediocre (κ = 0.411). In conclusion, the vertical fluoroscopic skyline view in wrist extension and supination seems to be the most adequate view to assess the quality of the fracture reduction, the distal radioulnar joint and the length of the screws in open reduction and internal fixation of distal radius fractures with volar locking plates.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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