Accessibility Tools

Faculty

Filippo Randelli

Filippo Randelli

 
Chief of Hip department (CAD) at Gaetano Pini Orthopedic Institute, University of Milan.  Focused on hip surgery (360°), from hip arthroscopy to complex revisions, and trauma. Wide scientific production with 101 indexed original publications, mainly on hip pathologies and trauma.

He is Executive Editor of the journal of Orthopedics and Traumatology and reviewer for different Journals (JHPS, Hip International, The Lancet (external), KSSTA, Scientific Report (Nature Journal), EFORT Open Reviews, Translational Sports Medicine and British Medical Bulletin Etc.

Past Chairman of the ESSKA hip Committee and AO Trauma Italy, he is now involved in various Council or Committees as EHPA (European Hip Preservation Associates), European Hip Society Sci Com, OTODI, Italian Revision Association, Italian Hip Society, SIAGASCOT and SLOTO.

He has collaborated with different entities to create or implement and scientifically support different medical devices in the orthopedic field.

He has performed, as faculty, more than 800 presentations in national and international meetings, moderating different sessions. He has also organized, as Chairman, more than 30 scientific events both in Italy and abroad.

logo HIP3
Modern Trends in Hip Surgery:
Hip Preservation and Primary Arthroplasty.
Valdoltra Orthopaedic Hospital -
Friday 20 November 2026

Registration

REGISTRATION NOW OPEN

To register contact:
prima.teja@siol.net

For company group bookings, please
request further instructions from the

Registration Office:

Phone: 00 386 31 290 660
e-mail: prima.teja@siol.net

 

Symposium Organization

Organizing committee:

Nejc Kurinčič, Mira Šavora, Branko Veladžič

CORRESPONDENCE
SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION

Dr. Nejc Kurinčič
Valdoltra Ortopaedic Hospital
Email: Nejc.Kurincic@ob-valdoltra.si

OBV logo L removebg preview
Our hospital was founded in 1909 as a sanatoryum for bone diseases for the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After World War I it was renovated by the American Red Cross. In 1920 it was taken over by the Italian Red Cross and after WW II Valdoltra became part of Yugoslavian health systeme. It turned to orthopaedics and in early 1961 was renamed Valdoltra Orthopaedic Hospital.