Perioperative calcium and vitamin D supplementation prevents hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy: Study
Thailand: A recent study has shown that perioperative supplementation of oral vitamin D and calcium significantly decreases the risks of biochemical and symptomatic hypocalcemia compared to postoperative supplementation. The study appeared in the International Journal of Surgery in its January 2023 issue.
Hypocalcemia is the most frequent complication following total thyroidectomy. The management of postoperative hypocalcemia is challenging. Some practitioners closely monitor hypocalcemia symptoms and serum calcium levels in the postoperative period and immediately treat with oral calcium with or without an intravenous calcium infusion or a vitamin D supplement, depending on the condition's severity. In contrast, some clinicians routinely manage with perioperative, postoperative or preoperative supplementation to prevent transient hypocalcemia.
Against the above background, Pichit Sittitrai from Chiang Mai University in Chiang Mai, Thailand, and colleagues aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of perioperative combined vitamin D and calcium supplementation compared to postoperative combined vitamin D and calcium supplementation in reducing symptomatic hypocalcemia.
For this purpose, the researchers carried out a prospective randomized placebo-controlled trial in patients undergoing total or complete thyroidectomy from 2017 to 2022. Elderly patients were either assigned to receive calcium carbonate and alfacalcidol or a placebo three days before surgery. Both groups were given alfacalcidol and calcium carbonate for 14 days after surgery. Clinical outcomes (symptoms and signs of hypocalcemia, IV calcium requirement, and medication-induced hypercalcemia) and laboratory results (levels of parathyroid hormone and calcium) were compared between the groups.
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