Just a question for the panel. In total shoulder arthroplasty,
Speaker:there's evidence now that the prolia use and the timing of that is very important
Speaker:because I think it's important for the GPs to understand how to manage prolia
Speaker:at the time of arthroplasty surgery.
Speaker:Certainly in the shoulder space there's evidence that the appropriate timing
Speaker:for prolia is about one to three months.
Speaker:You should time your arthroplast about one to three months post-prolia administration
Speaker:but you should not delay your next dose because there's a rebound effect in
Speaker:terms of bone loss and also osteointegration.
Speaker:So I was wondering in the lower limb space how you guys manage prolia because
Speaker:I think that's an important question that a lot of GPs would like an understanding of.
Speaker:Just explain for a lot of me who don't understand what prolia is.
Speaker:So prolia is obviously an injectable that GPs provide for osteoporosis.
Speaker:It has an effect on balancing a bone remodeling.
Speaker:And in the shoulder space, we are learning that if the prolia is not administered
Speaker:at the right time, you can get defects on osteointegration.
Speaker:So you can get effect of the implant not fully integrating into the bone.
Speaker:So in our space, what we do is, for me, a patient cannot have a shoulder arthroplasty
Speaker:if they are not within the timeframe frame of about one to three months post
Speaker:the last prolio administration,
Speaker:and it's not a good idea to completely cease the prolio too because you get
Speaker:a rebound effect where it may not help integration as well.
Speaker:Maybe Dr. Shaheen could start with hip and knee.
Speaker:How she manages. I wasn't aware of prolia being withheld for the news.
Speaker:Look, I have not been withholding.
Speaker:So, Tumit, you're talking about cementless joint replacements.
Speaker:What about cemented joint replacements?
Speaker:In terms of cemented, there isn't much data, but for the cementless components,
Speaker:which is a predominant sort of application in shoulders, is it seems that exactly
Speaker:what you said, Bernie, that not ceasing prolia is important,
Speaker:but the timing of the surgery is quite important.
Speaker:And they suggest about one to three months post the administration and then
Speaker:not ceasing afterwards.
Speaker:So what I've done is I have referred patients back to the osteoporosis team
Speaker:who is managing, usually endocrinology,
Speaker:managing the prolia.
Speaker:Because I wasn't switched on to the fact that there was a difficulty with joint replacements.
Speaker:I haven't seen it as a problem in our patients.
Speaker:I'm not sure that a lot of the patients that I do are on Prolia.
Speaker:I don't think that that's common, but we do certainly see it from time to time.
Speaker:Um you know the
Speaker:there there are there are osteoporotic
Speaker:patients who we operate on but generally patients who
Speaker:are arthritic tend to have very dense
Speaker:bone they they have very strong bone um so
Speaker:in the areas where uh where where
Speaker:i'm doing it i haven't seen that as an effect and i haven't seen it in
Speaker:the hip or knee literature either so i
Speaker:normally uh recommend they go back to the
Speaker:original um sort of person who's
Speaker:managing it because what what happens with prolia is
Speaker:that um the way that it works for osteoporosis is
Speaker:it um interferes with the balance
Speaker:of the osteoblasts which make bone and the osteoclast the breakdown bone and
Speaker:it interferes with osteoclast function And so even though you've got osteoblasts
Speaker:that can make bone and presumably are involved in part of the healing process
Speaker:with cementless implants,
Speaker:the balance between the osteoclast taking away bone that is non-functional or
Speaker:needs to be resorbed and the osteoblast is a problem.
Speaker:And this, I'm not sure that, does prolia have the same risk of stress fractures.
Speaker:Femoral stress fractures as others? Yes?
Speaker:Yes, correct. Yeah, it has similar, if not more than Zomita as well.
Speaker:So, Bernie, you might remember there was concern prior, before I started,
Speaker:also, Jerry's, it was about 2017 when,
Speaker:All the orthopedic surgeons were worried to start the inpatient osteoporotic
Speaker:medications because of the bone remodeling.
Speaker:But then there was good studies done to show that there was no effect.
Speaker:Therefore, now in Australia and New Zealand, we do give osteoporotic medications,
Speaker:especially for neck or femal fractures.
Speaker:I've got a question in the audience. Interesting. Google says.
Speaker:Sorry, just wait a moment so we can catch the recording. Thank you.
Speaker:Mr. Google says, do not take any osteoporosis medication, Actonel,
Speaker:Atelvia, Banosto, Bonivia, Evista, Fosamax, Prolia,
Speaker:Reclass, etc., for one month before and three months after surgery,
Speaker:unless it's specifically discussed with your surgeon.
Speaker:So that's only one month. But Prolia, was Prolia on that list?
Speaker:Because probably it's got a long active life.
Speaker:I think it's six monthly, so maybe a bit different.
Speaker:The other thing is, I think probably if you looked up the sort of risk profile
Speaker:on the little very microscopically typewritten precautions with any medication,
Speaker:you'll find just about everything on there.
Speaker:But from a practical point of view, I haven't seen it as an issue.
Speaker:And the fracture healing aspect of it has been highlighted because it doesn't
Speaker:interfere with normal fracture healing because of that balance between the osteoclast and osteoblast.
Speaker:And we talked about it last week in our M&M meeting as well.
Speaker:But I don't think that I've ever seen that practically as a problem.
Speaker:It hasn't been now that we have been quite comfortable starting the osteoporotic
Speaker:medications in hospital since 2019 and we haven't had any issues so far with bone healing.
Speaker:I think this is one of those occasions as well where it just highlights multidisciplinary teams.
Speaker:So as we said, we don't see an awful lot of prolia and so if I see a drug or
Speaker:a new biologic I haven't heard of, I'm just going to speak to the physician
Speaker:who's managing that and see if there's anything that affects the patient from
Speaker:their point of view in terms of timing.
Speaker:And from our point of view, we'll check literature and say, I haven't seen anything in the literature.
Speaker:So I'll be based on what's important for the timing of their injection for that
Speaker:condition rather than necessarily the replacement.
Speaker:Although we have obviously in the knee we have fully cemented
Speaker:options and if someone's osteoporotic we're likely to use that anyway because
Speaker:uh in blunt terms we just hit it a little
Speaker:less hard to put it in and if you're putting an uncemented implant hitting it
Speaker:hard in osteoporotic you're more risk of fracture so we tend to use the uncemented
Speaker:not all of us tend to do that but um but on the subject of obesity definitely
Speaker:obese patients all have very strong bones otherwise they They were collapsed and fractured long ago.
Speaker:So their bone strength is actually quite good.
Speaker:You rarely see an overweight or obese patient who is diagnosed with osteoporosis
Speaker:and on osteoporotic medication.
Speaker:Two questions about knee braces.
Speaker:One is, what are the optimal braces that we can recommend to the patients?
Speaker:What features they should have?
Speaker:Because there are many in the market.
Speaker:And what type duration? Because patients ask, should we wear it while sleeping?
Speaker:For how long we should wear it? If we can have some advice, please.
Speaker:Thank you. no of course i think
Speaker:the thing with knee braces is you're trying
Speaker:to treat uh often trying to treat different conditions
Speaker:whether you're treating a patellofemoral issue patellofemoral arthritis or tracking
Speaker:or whether you're treating a medial compartment arthritis or a lateral compartment
Speaker:arthritis so depending on the condition that then will dictate the knee brace
Speaker:to an extent um the the main brace i find to be reliable for arthritis is that medial unloader brace,
Speaker:it's the only one that actively unloads the compartment otherwise most other
Speaker:braces for me fall into the bracket if a patient's already using it and they
Speaker:like it I think that's fine and they ask me to recommend and I don't tend to
Speaker:recommend too many other braces because,
Speaker:they're a variable it's often difficult to work out how they might be working for them.
Speaker:Maybe offering some proprioception a little bit of stability especially in a
Speaker:knee that's become a little unstable with arthritis but um and with patella
Speaker:femoral sometimes the the braces that are uh centralize the kneecap and uh and
Speaker:maybe take a little bit of pressure off the lateral side but um.
Speaker:There are hundreds of braces out there and as I said,
Speaker:it's difficult to see how a lot of them do work other than offering some psychological
Speaker:reassurance for the patient and maybe a little bit of stability,
Speaker:a little bit of proprioception.
Speaker:So I don't tend to actually prescribe any other brace, but I'm happy for them to wear them.
Speaker:I wouldn't recommend wearing them overnight as a compressive effect they're
Speaker:likely to get more swelling and so it's really activity based for most of them.
Speaker:Just a question about the negative pressure dressing that we often see for a
Speaker:patient who had a total knee replacement.
Speaker:And sometimes they come with yucky oozing or some of them are partially removed
Speaker:and they come for advice or treatment.
Speaker:Or what do we do and what can you advise for GPs for follow-up?
Speaker:So negative pressure dressings, like the formal negative pressure dressing,
Speaker:which is the Pravena, has a circumscribed area around it that should have a seal around it.
Speaker:If the seal's not working, there's no point having the pressure dressing on.
Speaker:If there's a wound that's leaking or draining after surgery,
Speaker:you should send it back immediately to the surgeon who's looking after it.
Speaker:Here at Macquarie probably if it was like on a weekend you'd be able to get
Speaker:a dressing put on by the nurses up on the ward if you're able to maybe contact through the,
Speaker:through the reception either directly to the surgeon or possibly to the team
Speaker:on the ward who was looking after them but leaving it on particularly if there's
Speaker:the ability for fluids to get in, you know, during showers,
Speaker:that sort of thing, that type of messy dressing,
Speaker:take it off, keep it dry.
Speaker:And if it's oozing or draining, probably needs to be seen for another pressure dressing.
Speaker:And I'm not sure if they like some, there are some, depending on how much leakage
Speaker:there are, there are some dressings that are maybe easier to access like the
Speaker:Pico dressing, but I'm not sure that you'd be able to get it like through a pharmacy or anything.
Speaker:I think it's just probably just a hospital product I would say yeah I think very expensive mm-hmm.
Speaker:But if it stops working, the wound's dry, happy for a normal disease to go back
Speaker:on. Yes, that's right. So, I mean, timing's always difficult.
Speaker:So, patients leave hospital with the dressing, say, and it may be a week or
Speaker:two weeks before they go and see the GP.
Speaker:Normally, they should be coming back to the hospital, the surgeon,
Speaker:to have the negative pressure dressing managed, but they might sort of find
Speaker:themselves with the dressing falling apart and they go to you and say,
Speaker:you know, what should I do? Definitely contact us.
Speaker:The dressings normally will stay on quite comfortably for at least a week or 10 days.
Speaker:Some of them have got canisters and battery life, so two weeks now.
Speaker:So we're not, we don't mind leaving them on as long as they're working.
Speaker:It's quite safe, but if they're not working, I would just take it off.
Speaker:And if the suction normally stops around seven days? Well, so that's a technique
Speaker:that the company uses to protect their property rights, if you like.
Speaker:And you can get them now that lasts for two weeks.
Speaker:But if they're on a seven-day battery, then they should be instructed through
Speaker:the surgeon's rooms to have it dealt with at that time.
Speaker:I mean, they might say, leave it on for seven days and get your GP to take it off at that time.
Speaker:That's fine just take it off but if it's leaking then we
Speaker:need to have a look at it just because the battery stopped working doesn't
Speaker:necessarily mean you need to change the dressing though does it's a
Speaker:yes yeah no the the the uh
Speaker:if the battery stops working there's no point having the dressing on it will
Speaker:just lose its uh its pressure so you should take it off right question from
Speaker:online dr shaheen and the panels can discuss um the delirious patient post-operatively
Speaker:uh who decides when they're discharged and how do you decide that?
Speaker:Delirium is very common in elderly patients and the delirium resolution depends.
Speaker:Not every patient's delirium is similar.
Speaker:Some people resolve within two days, some is much more prolonged.
Speaker:About 20 to 25% of patients still leave the hospital with some sort of delirium.
Speaker:Of course, we decide according to what their symptoms are, whether they need
Speaker:to be monitored, whether they'll be better off at home or if they can be managed in rehab.
Speaker:It's an individualized-based judgment, but
Speaker:not all patients are kept in hospital till delirium resolves because sometimes
Speaker:delirium can be much more prolonged and can last more few weeks to months on discharge.
Speaker:Can going home help with the delirium in terms of going back to a common setting?
Speaker:So they can go to a common setting. They can be discharged home after discussion with the families.
Speaker:They understand what needs to be done. But as long as there's a follow-up,
Speaker:usually delirious patients are followed up by geriatricians.
Speaker:They can go back to nursing homes, residential cares, or even rehabs at times.
Speaker:If they are following instructions, they don't need to necessarily be in acute hospitals.
Speaker:Another question online, Dr. Zekert. Why do patients gain weight post-arphoplasty?
Speaker:What's the reason? One of my old consultants used to say it's because they get
Speaker:to the fridge quicker. Yes, that is the answer.
Speaker:Or more frequently.
Speaker:I think that's the simple answer.
Speaker:I think they're able to get around more and the reason they're overweight because
Speaker:they like eating. So they eat more.
Speaker:Now, speaking of getting to the fridge faster, ladies and gentlemen,
Speaker:we're going to wrap that up for this session. So please thank the panel.