N. De Luccia
University of São Paulo
8 Papers
28 Citations
N. De Luccia is an academic researcher from University of São Paulo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amputation & Humerus. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
Rehabilitation after amputation for vascular disease: a follow-up study.
TL;DR: In conclusion rehabilitation after vascular amputation is feasible in a large number of patients, despite a limited life span, and diabetes represents a major risk factor both for life and for the opposite limb.
Limb salvage using bypass to the perigeniculate arteries.
N. De Luccia,P. Sassaki,Anai E.S. Durazzo,G. Sandri,Marise Kikuchi,C. Hirata,Marcello Romiti,Roberto Sacilotto,Francisco Cardoso Brochado-Neto +8 more
TL;DR: Bypass to perigeniculate arteries is a viable treatment option for critical limb ischaemia in selected patients and should be considered for further study.
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Atualização e enfoque em operações vasculares arteriais da II Diretriz de Avaliação Perioperatória da Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia
André Coelho Marques,Bonno van Bellen,Bruno Caramelli,Calógero Presti,Claudio Pinho,Daniela Calderaro,Danielle Menosi Gualandro,Francine C. de Carvalho,Gal Carmo,H Correa Filho,Ivan Benaduce Casella,Luciana Savoy Fornari,Luciano Janussi Vacanti,Mlc Vieira,Maristela C. Monachini,N. De Luccia,Pai Ching Yu,Pedro Silvio Farsky,Roberto Henrique Heinisch,Sfm Gualandro,Wilson Mathias +20 more
Case study: Fitting of electronic elbow on an elbow disarticulated patient by means of a new surgical technique
N. De Luccia,H. L. T. Marino +1 more
TL;DR: The surgical plan outlined was to produce a shortening of the humerus, by means of an osteotomy just above the humeral condyles, preserving them for prosthetic suspension, and good initial results suggest this procedure should be considered in other elective situations.
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Reducing cross-clamping duration in aortoiliac reconstruction after renal transplantation. A case report.
TL;DR: A modified technique was used that reduced aortic cross-clamping time to twelve minutes, applicable to most patients, reduces warm ischemia to a minimum, and saves time for a careful aortoiliac reconstruction.
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