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Rhumatologue

Docteur Guillaume GIORDANO

📍 Paris 13e Arrondissement (75)HospitalierRPPS 10102179693
📊 Reconnaissance scientifique : 5/100📝 16 articles publiés📚 HAL (7)

✨ Profil synthétique

IA · 04/05/2026

Le Docteur Guillaume GIORDANO est un rhumatologue hospitalier à Paris, avec une production scientifique évaluée à 16 publications et un h-index de 5. Ses recherches couvrent divers domaines, notamment la rhumatologie et les soins orthopédiques. Il a publié sur des sujets tels que la goutte et les essais cliniques.

Expertises présumées

  • Goutte
  • Essai clinique
  • Épidémiologie des maladies rhumatismales
  • Prothèse du genou
  • Fractures rachidiennes
  • Techniques de fixation rachidienne
  • SAPL (Syndrome d'activation des plaquettes lors de l'hémodialyse)

Synthèse automatique à partir des sources publiques (HAL, OpenAlex, theses.fr, ClinicalTrials.gov, FAI²R, ANS). Pas une évaluation clinique. Le médecin peut corriger via son compte.

Diplômes

🎓 DES & spécialité ordinale

  • DES Rhumatologie
  • Rhumatologie (SM)

🎓 Diplômes

  • DE Docteur en médecine

Source : Annuaire Santé ANS (FHIR Practitioner.qualification) · Mises à jour quotidiennes.

Activité de recherche & publications

Source : bases de données publiques (OpenAlex, PubMed).

h-index

5

h articles cités ≥ h fois chacun. Un h de 5 = 5 publications avec 5+ citations.

Citations

76

Publications

16

i10-index

3

Thématiques principales

  • Sepsis Diagnosis and Treatment ×4
  • Respiratory Support and Mechanisms ×2
  • Intracranial Aneurysms: Treatment and Complications ×2
  • Total Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes ×2
  • Spinal Fractures and Fixation Techniques ×2

Affiliations FR : Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims · Hôpital Robert-Debré · Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne

Source : OpenAlex (CC0, OurResearch). Indicateurs académiques agrégés sur 250 M+ d'œuvres.

Bibliographie

Source : HAL — archive ouverte CCSD/CNRS (couvre articles, chapitres EMC, communications congrès, thèses).

Lieu de consultation

  • GHU APHP SUN SITE PITIE SALPETRIERE

    47-83 — 47 Boulevard DE L HOPITAL, 75651 Paris 13e Arrondissement

    0142160000Hospitalier

Tarifs & secteur de conventionnement

Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).

Prendre rendez-vous & contact

Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).

Top publications · les plus citées

  • 1
    Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction associated with extra-articular tenodesis: A prospective clinical and radiographic evaluation with 10- to 13-year follow-up

    The American journal of sports medicine · 2009

    📚 166 citations🎯 RCR 8.25Top 3% NIH🩺 Clinique
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    Background This study was undertaken to prospectively analyze, at a mean 11-year follow-up, the clinical and radiographic outcomes in patients undergoing the authors’ intra-articular anterior cruciate ligament reconstructive procedure with extraarticular augmentation, and to compare these data with those at 5-year follow-up. Purpose The clinical and radiographic outcomes in patients undergoing anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction were analyzed at a mean 11-year follow-up. Study Design Case series; Level of evidence, 4. Methods The authors studied 54 of 60 consecutive high-level sports patients who underwent their anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction technique between 1993 and 1995. The surgical technique uses the hamstring tendons with intact tibial insertions for intra-articular double-stranded reconstruction plus an extra-articular plasty (augmentation) performed with the remnant part of the tendons. Clinical and radiographic evaluations were performed. Results After 11 years, the International Knee Documentation Committee score demonstrated good or excellent results (A and B) in 90.7% of patients. Ligament arthrometry using the KT-2000 arthrometer demonstrated that only 2 patients had >5 mm manual maximum side-to-side difference in laxity. The mean Tegner activity score was 4.5, while the mean Lysholm score was 97.3 and the mean subjective score was 90.0%. Radiographic evaluation demonstrated progressive joint narrowing only for the 20 patients having concomitant medial meniscal surgery. Conclusion The original technique demonstrates highly satisfactory results. Factors negatively affecting the outcomes are meniscectomy and laxity. In this series, anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with lateral plasty shows maintenance of knee stability at long-term follow-up. Knee osteoarthritis after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with extra-articular tenodesis does not appear to be greater than after anterior cruciate ligament reconstructions without extra-articular augmentation as reported in historical controls.

  • 2
    Arthroscopic collagen meniscus implant results at 6 to 8 years follow up

    Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the ESSKA · 2007

    📚 91 citations🎯 RCR 3.60Top 13% NIH
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    AbstractMeniscal substitution is a fundamental procedure to prevent osteoarthritis of the knee after massive meniscectomy. Stone, Steadman and Rodkey have developed a bioreadsorbable collagen matrix (CMI) which acts as a scaffold to restore the original medial meniscal. The objective of this study was to prospectively evaluate the results of CMI implantation at a follow up from a minimum of 6 to a maximum of 8 years. Eight patients (mean age 25) were evaluated at a final observation point from 6 to 8 years after CMI implantation. Inclusion criteria were an irreparable meniscal tear or a previous meniscectomy involving the medial meniscus. Follow up evaluation included Cincinnati Knee Rating Scale (CKRS), IKDC, subjective evaluation and X‐ray and MRI control. There were no complications related to the device. All patients were able to return to day activities without limitations 3 months after surgery. Both subjective CKRS score and objective IKDC score showed improvement in all cases except one patient with an ACL re‐injury. In two cases scores were slightly worse from 2 years after surgery to the final observation point. The other five cases obtained maximum score at final follow‐up. In four cases the absence of pain remained until the final observation point, while in four cases a low entity of pain was described at long term follow‐up. MRI showed in five cases mixoid degeneration signal, two had normal signal with reduced size, while one patient had no recognizable implant. Six patients had preserved cartilage and articular space, with no changes respect to pre‐op control. Arthroscopic second look evaluation has been performed in three cases, revealing in two cases the presence of the implant, although with a reduced size respect to the original one, while in one case the CMI was almost disappeared. Our small series of eight patients prospectively followed from 6 to 8 years of follow‐up has shown highly satisfactory results. Although the aspect of the implant was mostly abnormal, the implant may have helped reduce the deterioration of the knee joint at final observation time.

  • 3
    Strains across the acetabular labrum during hip motion: a cadaveric model

    The American journal of sports medicine · 2011

    📚 55 citations🎯 RCR 2.98Top 16% NIH
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    Background Labral tears commonly cause disabling intra-articular hip pain and are commonly treated with hip arthroscopy. However, the function and role of the labrum are still unclear. Hypotheses (1) Flexion, adduction, and internal rotation (a position clinically defined as the position for physical examination known as the impingement test) places greatest circumferential strain on the anterolateral labrum and posterior labrum; (2) extension with external rotation (a position clinically utilized during physical examination to assess for posterior impingement and for anterior instability) places significant circumferential strains on the anterior labrum; (3) abduction with external rotation during neutral flexion-extension (the position the extremity rests in when a patient lies supine) places the greatest load on the lateral labrum. Study Design Descriptive laboratory study. Methods Twelve cadaveric hips (age, 79 years) without labral tears or arthritis were studied. Hips were dissected free of soft tissues, except the capsuloligamentous structures. Differential variable reluctance transducers were placed in the labrum anteriorly, anterolaterally, laterally, and posteriorly to record circumferential strains in all 4 regions as the hip was placed in 36 different positions. Results The posterior labrum had the greatest circumferential strains identified; the peak was in the flexed position, in adduction or neutral abduction-adduction. The greatest strains anteriorly were in flexion with adduction. The greatest strains anterolaterally were in full extension. External rotation had greater strains than neutral rotation and internal rotation. The greatest strains laterally were at 90° of flexion with abduction, and external or neutral rotation. In the impingement position, the anterolateral strain increased the most, while the posterior labrum showed decreased strain (greatest magnitude of strain change). When the hip is externally rotated and in neutral flexion-extension or fully extended, the posterior labrum has significantly increased strain, while the anterolateral labrum strain is decreased. Conclusion These are the first comprehensive strain data (of circumferential strain) analyzing the whole hip labrum. For the intact labrum, the greatest strain change was at the posterior acetabulum, whereas clinically, acetabular labral tears occur most frequently anterolaterally or anteriorly. The results are consistent with the impingement test as an assessment of anterolateral acetabular labral stress. The hyperextension-rotation test, often used clinically to assess anterior hip instability and posterior impingement, did not show a change in strain anteriorly, but did reveal an increase in strain posteriorly. Clinical Relevance Although this study does not include muscular forces across the hip joint, it does provide a clue as to the stresses about the labrum through the complete range of motions of the hip, which may help in providing a better understanding of the cause of labral tears and in the protection of labral repairs.

Publications scientifiques (25) — classées par pathologie

Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).

Transversal21

Épidémiologie & registres1

Essai clinique1

Goutte1

SAPL1

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