Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 2 of 2
Results per page:
The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 95-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1575 - 1580
1 Nov 2013
Salai M Somjen D Gigi R Yakobson O Katzburg S Dolkart O

We analysed the effects of commonly used medications on human osteoblastic cell activity in vitro, specifically proliferation and tissue mineralisation. A list of medications was retrieved from the records of patients aged > 65 years filed in the database of the largest health maintenance organisation in our country (> two million members). Proliferation and mineralisation assays were performed on the following drugs: rosuvastatin (statin), metformin (antidiabetic), metoprolol (β-blocker), citalopram (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor [SSRI]), and omeprazole (proton pump inhibitor (PPI)). All tested drugs significantly stimulated DNA synthesis to varying degrees, with rosuvastatin 5 µg/ml being the most effective among them (mean 225% (sd 20)), compared with metformin 10 µg/ml (185% (sd 10)), metoprolol 0.25 µg/ml (190% (sd 20)), citalopram 0.05 µg/ml (150% (sd 10)) and omeprazole 0.001 µg/ml (145% (sd 5)). Metformin and metoprolol (to a small extent) and rosuvastatin (to a much higher extent) inhibited cell mineralisation (85% (sd 5)). Our results indicate the need to evaluate the medications prescribed to patients in terms of their potential action on osteoblasts. Appropriate evaluation and prophylactic treatment (when necessary) might lower the incidence and costs associated with potential medication-induced osteoporosis.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2013;95-B:1575–80.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 87-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 340 - 340
1 Sep 2005
Vendittoli P Lavigne M Fallaha M Drolet P Makinen P
Full Access

Introduction and Aims: Although many analgesia modalities have been tried, total knee arthroplasty remains a painful procedure and parenteral narcotics still play a major role in post-operative pain control. We want to know if peri-articular large dose injection of local anaesthetics reduces narcotics administration and their side effects. Method: Thirty-six patients undergoing a total knee replacement were randomised to two treatment groups. The experimental group received peri-articular large dose infiltration of Ropivacaine (local anaesthetic) during surgery and on day one after surgery via an intra-articular catheter. The pain control was completed with a self-delivering morphine pump. The control group received the morphine pump alone. The therapists recording post-op data were blind to the treatment group. Narcotics consumption, pain control, medication side effects, complications, range of motion and patient satisfaction were monitored. Ropivacaine serum levels were measured in the early post-operative period. Results: Although satisfaction was very high in both groups, morphine consumption was significantly lower for the infiltration group: 29 mg/24h compared to 51 mg/24 (p< 0.01) and 47 mg/40h compared to 71 mg/40h (p< 0.04). The post-operative pain evaluated with visual analogue scale (0–10) was reduced significantly on the day of surgery 2.6 vs 5.0 (p< 0.04) and at exercise on day one post-op: 4.9 vs 7.0 (p< 0.01). There was no significant difference in post-operative range of motion at five days post-op. The surgical time was increased significantly by 18 minutes in the infiltration group 126 vs 108 minutes (p< 0.05). Complication rate was not significantly different for both groups (infiltration vs control): nausea symptoms 2.2h/48h vs 5.4h/48, confusion two subjects in each group, constipation three subjects in each group and one deep vein thrombosis per group. No complication was related to the addition of the infiltration of the local anaesthetics and the serum levels were in a safe range. Conclusion: This peri-operative local anaesthetics infiltration protocol offer many benefits for the patients undergoing a total knee arthroplasty. It is improving the pain control, reducing the amount of narcotics consumption and is a safe procedure