BMC Surgery (May 2017)

Hypomagnesemia predicts postoperative biochemical hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy

  • Han Luo,
  • Hongliu Yang,
  • Wanjun Zhao,
  • Tao Wei,
  • Anping Su,
  • Bin Wang,
  • Jingqiang Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12893-017-0258-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background To investigate the role of magnesium in biochemical and symptomatic hypocalcemia, a retrospective study was conducted. Methods Less-than-total thyroidectomy patients were excluded from the final analysis. Identified the risk factors of biochemical and symptomatic hypocalcemia, and investigated the correlation by logistic regression and correlation test respectively. Results A total of 304 patients were included in the final analysis. General incidence of hypomagnesemia was 23.36%. Logistic regression showed that gender (female) (OR = 2.238, p = 0.015) and postoperative hypomagnesemia (OR = 2.010, p = 0.017) were independent risk factors for biochemical hypocalcemia. Both Pearson and partial correlation tests indicated there was indeed significant relation between calcium and magnesium. However, relative decreasing of iPTH (>70%) (6.691, p < 0.001) and hypocalcemia (2.222, p = 0.046) were identified as risk factors of symptomatic hypocalcemia. The difference remained significant even in normoparathyroidism patients. Conclusions Postoperative hypomagnesemia was independent risk factor of biochemical hypocalcemia. Relative decline of iPTH was predominating in predicting symptomatic hypocalcemia.

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