补充镁对甲状腺切除术后低钙血症的影响:一项前瞻性单中心研究。

IF 2.5 Q3 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Minerva endocrinology Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2021-10-20 DOI:10.23736/S2724-6507.21.03526-0
Michele N Minuto, Gregorio Santori, Gian L Ansaldo, Nicola Solari, Mara Boschetti, Caterina Tassone, Stefano Barbieri, Simona Reina, Matteo Mascherini, Emanuela Varaldo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:甲状旁腺功能减退症导致的严重和/或无症状低钙血症是甲状腺手术患者出院的主要禁忌症。低镁血症可能会导致甲状旁腺功能减退症的发生,并且经常在甲状腺手术后观察到低钙血症患者。通过将接受预防性镁补充的患者与在术后出现低镁症状后才接受镁补充的对照组患者进行比较,对预防性镁补充和术后镁补充对术后低钙血症和低镁血症的影响进行了前瞻性评估:120名接受甲状腺全切除术的患者参与了这项研究。研究组包括 73 名患者,对照组包括 47 名患者。手术前,研究组患者口服镁5天;术后,对所有出现低钙血症和低镁血症的患者服用钙和镁:结果:术后出现生化性低钙血症(血清钙):结论:尽管甲状腺切除术后镁和钙的水平呈相同趋势,但镁预防和镁治疗都不会影响术后低钙血症的临床过程。
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Effects of magnesium supplementation on post-thyroidectomy hypocalcemia: a prospective single-center study.

Background: Severe and/or symptomatic hypocalcemia due to hypoparathyroidism is the main contraindication for discharge in patients who have undergone thyroid surgery. Hypomagnesemia may contribute to the onset of hypoparathyroidism and is frequently observed after thyroid surgery in hypocalcemic patients. The impact of prophylactic and postoperative Magnesium supplementation on postoperative hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia was prospectively evaluated by comparing patients undergoing prophylactic supplementation to a control group of patients who had only received magnesium after evidence of postoperative hypomagnesemia.

Methods: One hundred and twenty patients who underwent a total thyroidectomy participated in the study. Seventy-three patients were included in the study group, 47 in the control group. Prior to surgery, patients in the study group were given magnesium orally for 5 days; postoperatively, calcium and magnesium was administered to all patients who displayed hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia.

Results: Postoperative biochemical hypocalcemia (serum calcium <8.5 mg/dL, regardless of its clinical severity) was found in 60 patients (50%) on D1 and in 58 patients (48.4%) on D2. Among hypocalcemic patients, hypomagnesemia was recorded in 29 at D1 (48%), and in 46 at D2 (79%). A significant positive correlation was found between magnesium, calcium, and parathyroid hormone in the first two postoperative days, while a significant inverse correlation occurred for these same parameters and length of hospital stay (P<0.001). One hundred and five patients (87.5%) were discharged as expected on the second postoperative day (65 in the study group, 40 in the control group, P=0.724), whereas 15 patients (12.5%) required prolonged hospitalization (eight in the study group, seven in the control group, P=0.721). The Study group only showed significantly higher magnesium levels on the first postoperative day (P=0.03).

Conclusions: Although magnesium and calcium levels showed the same trend after thyroidectomy, neither Magnesium prophylaxis nor Magnesium treatment influenced the clinical course of postoperative hypocalcemia.

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