E
Elisa Pala
Researcher at University of Padua
Publications - 57
Citations - 2270
Elisa Pala is an academic researcher from University of Padua. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Amputation. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 54 publications receiving 1703 citations. Previous affiliations of Elisa Pala include University of Bologna.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Failure mode classification for tumor endoprostheses: retrospective review of five institutions and a literature review
Eric Henderson,John S. Groundland,Elisa Pala,Jeremy A. Dennis,R. D. Wooten,David Cheong,Reinhard Windhager,Rainer Kotz,Mario Mercuri,Philipp T. Funovics,Francis J. Hornicek,H. Thomas Temple,Pietro Ruggieri,G. Douglas Letson +13 more
TL;DR: There are five primary modes of endoprosthetic failure, and their relative incidences are significantly different and dependent on anatomic location.
Journal ArticleDOI
Survival of Modern Knee Tumor Megaprostheses: Failures, Functional Results, and a Comparative Statistical Analysis
TL;DR: Results at a minimum of 2 years with this modular prosthesis are satisfactory in terms of survivorship (both oncologic and reconstructive) and causes and rates of failure.
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Clinical outcome of central conventional chondrosarcoma.
Andrea Angelini,Giovanni Guerra,Andreas F. Mavrogenis,Elisa Pala,Piero Picci,Pietro Ruggieri +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed survival, local recurrence (LR), and metastasis rates between the three histological tumor grades, and whether type of treatment and tumor site influenced prognosis for each histologic grade.
Journal ArticleDOI
Survival of current production tumor endoprostheses: Complications, functional results, and a comparative statistical analysis
Elisa Pala,Eric Henderson,Teresa Calabrò,Andrea Angelini,C. N. Abati,Giulia Trovarelli,Pietro Ruggieri +6 more
TL;DR: Retrospectively analyze outcomes of current‐generation Global Modular Replacement System (GMRS) modular tumor endoprosthesis for the lower limb in primary and secondary implantation procedures.
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Outcome of expandable prostheses in children.
Pietro Ruggieri,Andreas F. Mavrogenis,Elisa Pala,Matteo Romantini,Marco Manfrini,Mario Mercuri +5 more
TL;DR: The Kotz Growing prosthesis, although it requires an open lengthening procedure, has shown higher survival when compared with the noninvasive Repiphysis prostheses, however, the total lengthening remains small, and the complications rates are high even with thenoninvasive prostheses.