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Nicola Maffulli

Researcher at University of Salerno

Publications -  1759
Citations -  68924

Nicola Maffulli is an academic researcher from University of Salerno. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Achilles tendon. The author has an hindex of 115, co-authored 1570 publications receiving 59548 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicola Maffulli include University of Aberdeen & University of Sydney.

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Achilles Tendon Rupture and Tendinopathy: Management of Complications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors gave an up-to-date account on their personal views of managing complications following Achilles tendon rupture, tendinopathy, and delayed rupture, and gave a detailed account of the complications that arise from the management of these conditions.
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Lateral retinacular release combined with MPFL reconstruction for patellofemoral instability: a systematic review

TL;DR: There is no evidence that adding a lateral release impacts positively on the outcome of MPFL reconstruction, and the role of the lateral retinaculum in patellofemoral instability is still debated.
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Adaptative or maladaptative hypertrophy, different spatial distribution of myocardial contraction.

TL;DR: This work hypothesized that different LVH aetiology could lead to dissimilar spatial distribution left ventricular (LV) contraction, and compared different components of LV contraction using 2‐dimensional (2‐D) speckle tracking derived strain in subjects with adaptative hypertrophy (endurance athletes), maladaptative hyperTrophy (hypertensive patients) and healthy controls.
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Artificial intelligence and machine learning in orthopedic surgery: a systematic review protocol.

TL;DR: This systematic review will evaluate the advances of AI and ML in the field of orthopedic surgery and find a large quantity of uncontrolled studies and a smaller subset of articles describing actual applications and outcomes for clinical care.
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Endurance in young athletes: it can be trained

TL;DR: A large number of young athletes train for competitive sport before puberty, yet the understanding of their capabilities to benefit from endurance training is limited, and adequate intensity, type, and duration of training have shown in children the qualitative changes expected from adults.