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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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Journal Article

Shoulder injuries in soccer players.

TL;DR: The aim of this review is to report the available epidemiological data on shoulder specific injuries in soccer players and to describe the common mechanisms of shoulder injuries in football players.
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Open tibial fractures in the paediatric population: a systematic review of the literature.

TL;DR: It is unclear whether open fractures of the tibia in children should be managed according to the principles followed in adults, and many authors support primary skin closure and non-operative management for grade I open fractures.
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Viscosupplementation with intra-articular hyaluronic acid for hip disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: The results suggest that this is the best conservative therapy before surgery and it can act on pain relief and function however there is no evidence to prove its ability to modify the morphological structure of the pathological hip and the natural history of the disease.
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Vitamin D and oestrogen receptor polymorphisms in developmental dysplasia of the hip and primary protrusio acetabuli--a preliminary study.

TL;DR: A possible correlation between gene polymorphism in the oestrogen and vitamin D receptors and susceptibility to, and severity of DDH is suggested.
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Covid-19-The real role of NSAIDs in Italy.

TL;DR: The scientists and surgeons of one of the biggest orthopedic institutes in Italy feel the urge to share their position about the recent warnings on the use of anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in this coronavirus “era,” noting the danger of unproven and unfounded information spread out through mass and social media.