胃肠道手术、消化不良和颈部手术后低钙血症。

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q1 SURGERY Surgery Pub Date : 2024-10-28 DOI:10.1016/j.surg.2024.08.057
Jesse E Passman, Sara Ginzberg, Julia A Gasior, Lauren Krumeich, Colleen Brensinger, Amanda Bader, Jasmine Hwang, Rachel Kelz, Heather Wachtel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:术后低钙血症是甲状腺和甲状旁腺手术的常见并发症。曾接受胃旁路手术的患者术后发生低钙血症的风险更高,但其他吸收不良情况的影响尚不十分清楚。在这项研究中,我们评估了多种内科和外科吸收不良状态与甲状腺和甲状旁腺手术后低钙血症之间的关系:我们对 Optum 脱敏临床信息学数据集市数据库(2004-2022 年)中接受甲状腺全切除术和/或甲状旁腺切除术的患者进行了一项回顾性队列研究。患者被分为外科(前肠/中肠:胃切除术、肠旁路术、肠切除术、肠造口术、胰腺切除术,或后肠:结肠切除术/结肠造口术)或内科(克罗恩病或乳糜泻)吸收不良患者。主要结果是早期(结果:在25400名患者中(56.9%接受了甲状腺全切除术,40.8%接受了甲状旁腺切除术,2.4%同时接受了两种手术),4.0%的患者术前存在吸收不良情况。8.8%的患者在术后早期出现低钙血症,18.3%的患者在术后晚期出现低钙血症。甲状腺切除术比甲状旁腺切除术更容易导致低钙血症(几率比:1.22;P < .001)。在两种手术中,胰腺切除术导致术后低钙血症的调整几率是甲状旁腺切除术的两倍(几率比:2.27;P = .031)。曾接受前肠/中肠手术的患者在甲状腺全切除术后的风险更高(几率比:1.65,P = .002)。这种关联在晚期低钙血症(几率比:1.82,P < .001)而非早期低钙血症(几率比:1.33,P = .175)中非常明显。后肠手术和药物吸收不良没有显示出这种关联:结论:前肠和中肠切除术可能会导致患者术后出现低钙血症,尤其是接受甲状腺全切除术的患者。
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Gastrointestinal surgery, malabsorptive conditions, and postoperative hypocalcemia after neck surgery.

Background: Postoperative hypocalcemia is a common complication of thyroid and parathyroid surgery. Patients with prior gastric bypass face increased risk of postoperative hypocalcemia, but the impact of other malabsorptive conditions is not well understood. In this study, we evaluated the relationship between multiple medical and surgical malabsorptive states and hypocalcemia after thyroid and parathyroid surgery.

Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent total thyroidectomy and/or parathyroidectomy in Optum's deidentified Clinformatics Data Mart Database (2004-2022). Patients were categorized as having surgical (foregut/midgut: gastrectomy, intestinal bypass, enterectomy, enterostomy, pancreatectomy, or hindgut: colectomy/colostomy) or medical (Crohn or Celiac disease) malabsorptive conditions. The primary outcomes were early (<7 days) and late (7-365 days) postoperative hypocalcemia. Logistic regression was performed to determine the associations between malabsorptive conditions and outcomes.

Results: Of 25,400 patients (56.9% total thyroidectomy, 40.8% parathyroidectomy, and 2.4% both procedures), 4.0% had a pre-existing malabsorptive condition. Early postoperative hypocalcemia occurred in 8.8% of patients, and late hypocalcemia in 18.3%. Thyroidectomy was associated with a greater likelihood of hypocalcemia than parathyroidectomy (odds ratio: 1.22; P < .001). Pancreatectomy was associated with twice the adjusted odds of postoperative hypocalcemia (odds ratio: 2.27; P = .031) across both procedures. Patients with prior foregut/midgut surgery were at higher risk after total thyroidectomy (odds ratio: 1.65, P = .002). This association was significant in late (odds ratio: 1.82, P < .001) rather than early hypocalcemia (odds ratio: 1.33, P = .175). Hindgut surgery and medical malabsorption did not demonstrate such associations.

Conclusion: Prior foregut and midgut resections may predispose patients to postoperative hypocalcemia, particularly in patients undergoing total thyroidectomy.

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来源期刊
Surgery
Surgery 医学-外科
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
687
审稿时长
64 days
期刊介绍: For 66 years, Surgery has published practical, authoritative information about procedures, clinical advances, and major trends shaping general surgery. Each issue features original scientific contributions and clinical reports. Peer-reviewed articles cover topics in oncology, trauma, gastrointestinal, vascular, and transplantation surgery. The journal also publishes papers from the meetings of its sponsoring societies, the Society of University Surgeons, the Central Surgical Association, and the American Association of Endocrine Surgeons.
期刊最新文献
A large single-center analysis of postoperative hemorrhage in more than 43,000 thyroid operations: The relevance of intraoperative systolic blood pressure, the individual surgeon, and surgeon-to-patient gender (in-)congruence. Discussion. The effect of surgical management in mitigating fragility fracture risk among individuals with primary hyperparathyroidism. Contents A Tribute to Dr Kevin E. Behrns, Editor-in-Chief of SURGERY
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