Nutrients (Apr 2022)

Does Time Matter in Deficit of Calcium after Total Thyroidectomy in Subjects with Previous Bariatric Surgery?

  • Salvatore Tramontano,
  • Gerardo Sarno,
  • Pietro Calabrese,
  • Luigi Schiavo,
  • Maria Spagnuolo,
  • Vincenzo Pilone

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14091805
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 9
p. 1805

Abstract

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Background: Hypoparathyroidism-related hypocalcemia is a common complication after total thyroidectomy (TT), particularly if there is a history of prior bariatric surgery. However, it is still unknown if it is the surgery timing or the type of bariatric intervention that increases the risk of developing this complication. Methods: We compared the risk of hypocalcemia (serum calcium levels p = 0.49). Furthermore, hypocalcemia risk was similar between patients with a history of LSG (30.5%) and GB (33%) (p = 0.85). The prevalences of transient and permanent hypoparathyroidism were similar between patients with a history of restrictive procedures and in controls; similarly, no differences were detected between subjects undergoing LSG and GB. Conclusions: Restrictive bariatric surgery (LSG and GB) is not a risk factor for post-thyroidectomy hypocalcemia and hypoparathyroidism and thus did not require a different perioperative supplementation protocol compared to subjects without history of bariatric surgery undergoing TT.

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