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Paul M. Pellicci

Researcher at Hospital for Special Surgery

Publications -  82
Citations -  7353

Paul M. Pellicci is an academic researcher from Hospital for Special Surgery. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arthroplasty & Femoral head. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 82 publications receiving 7074 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul M. Pellicci include NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital & Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

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Results of revision for mechanical failure after cemented total hip replacement, 1979 to 1982. A two to five-year follow-up.

TL;DR: From January 1979 to February 1982, 143 patients (seventy-nine women and sixty-four men) with 146 uninfected cemented total hip arthroplasties had revision cemented hipArthroplasty at The Hospital for Special Surgery for what was considered to be mechanical failure.
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Cervical spine fusion in rheumatoid arthritis.

TL;DR: A classification of the pain and the neural involvement in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and a new method of measuring superior migration are devised and the results show that four of five patients who had an anterior fusion had no improvement and the condition was made worse in two.
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Metallic wear in failed titanium-alloy total hip replacements. A histological and quantitative analysis.

TL;DR: The factors to which failure was attributed were: vertical orientation of the acetabular component, poor cementing technique on the femoral side, infection, and separation of a sintered pad made of pure titanium (one hip).
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Posterior approach to total hip replacement using enhanced posterior soft tissue repair

TL;DR: The two senior authors (PMP, RP) independently began using an identical enhanced posterior soft tissue repair after total hip replacement through a posterior approach and found that a dislocation rate was reduced in patients before and after the enhanced closure.
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Long-term results of revision total hip replacement. A follow-up report.

TL;DR: There is an increased failure rate with longer follow-up of revision total hip replacement, and that progressive radiolucency at an interface indicates a poor prognosis for the arthroplasty.