The Impact of Vitamin D Deficiency on Hypocalcaemia Following Total Thyroidectomy
HypocalcemiaVitamin D DeficiencyPost-operative hypocalcaemia following total thyroidectomy is a well-known complication and becoming a major area of research. Many factors are assumed to increase the incidence of post-thyroidectomy hypocalcaemia, but the impact of vitamin D deficiency remains uncertain. Since results so far were inconclusive, the goal in this study is to significantly determine the relation between those two factors. This study is the first to deal with this issue through patients who underwent total thyroidectomy that was performed by the same surgeon and the same surgical technique. A retrospective evaluation study of patients who underwent total thyroidectomy at the head and neck unit of the Otorhinolaryngology department at our institution between January 2013 and October 2016. A total number of 60 patients underwent total thyroidectomy with available vitamin D levels before surgery, as well as pre and post-operative PTH and calcium levels. Pre-operative vitamin D and PTH levels were checked within a maximum of one month duration before surgery. All patients were operated by the same surgeon -Dr. Galit Avior-, with the same surgical technique. The study involves access to the patients files and admission reports. In addition the investigators would like to be able to call the patients in order to ask them whether Vitamin D deficiency was corrected or not before their surgery, and If it was corrected then when exactly.
Vitamin D Levels and Postoperative Hypocalcemia After Total Thyroidectomy
HypocalcemiaHypoparathyroidism2 moreHypocalcemia is one of the most frequent complications of total thyroidectomy, a procedure used for benign as well as malignant conditions of the thyroid gland. Postoperative hypocalcemia is usually caused by hypoparathyroidism. Vitamin D is implicated in calcium metabolism as it increases intestinal calcium transport and regulates parathormone production. Aim of the present study is to evaluate preoperative vitamin D levels as a prognostic factor for postoperative hypocalcemia and hypoparathyroidism.
The Study of a Safe and Cost-effective Method to Identify Patients at Low Risk of Significant Hypocalcemia...
Hypocalcemia After Total ThyroidectomyHypocalcemia is the complication, after total thyroidectomy, that usually determines the length of hospital stay.Serum calcium levels is a quick and cost-effective practice to recognise hypocalcemia in the postoperative follow up. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this perspective study is to determine if consecutive postoperative serum calcium levels early after total thyroidectomy can be used to identify patients who are unlikely to develop significant hypocalcemia and can be safely discharged within 24 to 48 hours postoperative.
Is Correcting Total Serum Calcium Levels Important After Thyroidectomy
HypocalcemiaThyroid4 moreThis study is designed as a prospective non-randomized longitudinal single- center cohort study to evaluate the importance of correcting total serum calcium levels. It will enroll around 100 patients undergoing total thyroidectomy with data being collected from March 2020 up to August 2020. The aim of this study is to determine whether total serum calcium level should be corrected for serum albumin in assessing symptomatic hypocalcemia after total thyroidectomy and which variable (total serum calcium, ionized calcium, corrected serum calcium for albumin with Payne's formula or early PTH) is the most valuable predictor of symptomatic hypocalcemia after total thyroidectomy.
Early Prediction of Hypocalcemia After Thyroidectomy Using Postoperative Second Hour Parathormone...
HypocalcemiaPostoperative ParathormoneHypocalcemia is the most frequent complication in thyroid surgeries. Diagnosing this complication earlier will reduce longer hospital stay and will lead to an earlier intervention. The purpose of the study is to evaluate postoperative second hour parathyroid hormone measurement as a predictor for early stage hypocalcemia.
Hypocalcemia in Infants and Children
HypocalcemiaHypocalcemia is defined as reduction in the level of the ionized calcium in the blood to less than 0.95 mmole/ litre. In some cases it is associated with symptoms such as neuromuscular impairment in the form of convulsions ,carpopedal spasm,parathesia ,laryngiospasm ,stridor……etc .Calcium circulates in blood stream in three fractions :protein bound to calcium,primarly to albumen(40%) and in 50% of the cases calcium is present in the ionized state which is physiologically active (Dias ,c et a l, 2013) . Symptomatizing hypocalcemia may occur in cases of vitamin D deficiency rickets (nutritional deficiency in infants less than two years ) .It may also occur in vitamin D resistant rickets e.g renal rickets because of failure of the kidney to synthesize 1-OH cholecalciferol of the 1-25 di-OH cholecalciferol (the active form of vitamin D).