Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2023) 90 EP141 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.90.EP141

ECE2023 Eposter Presentations Calcium and Bone (99 abstracts)

Risk factors of hypoparathyroidism after total thyroidectomy: A prospective study

Souha Kallel 1 , Mohamed Amin Chaabouni 1 , Faten Haj Kacem Akid 2 , Majdi Trigui 1 , Hamdi Frikha 2 , Mohamed Abid 2 & Ilhem Charfeddine 1


1Habib Bourguiba Hospital, Department of Otolaryngology (ENT) Head and Neck Surgery, Sfax, Tunisia; 2Hedi Chaker Hospital, Department of Endocrinology, Sfax, Tunisia


Objective: Identify the risk factors of hypoparathyroidism (hypoPT) after Total thyroidectomy (TT).

Patients and Methods: Our study is a randomised clinical trial. It enrolled patients who underwent total thyroidectomy at the department of ENT surgery at Habib Bourguiba Hospital in Sfax between November 2020 and august 2021. We studied age, gender, type of surgery, duration of surgery, vitamin D level, magnesium level, histopathological exam, inadvertent resection of parathyroid gland, central neck dissection (CND) and the impact of prophylactic supplementation with oral calcium and vitamin D.

Results: Forty-seven patients were recruited for this study. They were divided into two groups: group 1: with prophylactic supplementation (24 patients) and group 2: without prophylactic supplementation (23 patients). We studied the impact of the risk factors on day one parathormone level. There were 19 patients with transient postoperative hypoparathyroidism. There was not a significant difference between the two groups regarding Day 1 PTH level. The results of univariate analysis showed a significant relation between transient hypoPT with severe hypovitaminosis D (P=0.001), operative time(P=0.01), CND (P=0.03) and accidental resection of parathyroid gland (P=0.04). Multivariate analysis did not show any relation of hypoPT with any risk factor. The prophylactic supplementation allowed to significantly reduce the occurrence of biological and clinical hypocalcaemia.

Conclusion: In multivariate logistic regression we did not identify any independent risk factor. This explains the difficulty to predict the occurrence of such a complication. For that, prophylactic postoperative supplementation with oral calcium and vitamin D seems to be a safe choice to prevent postoperative hypocalcaemia.

Volume 90

25th European Congress of Endocrinology

Istanbul, Turkey
13 May 2023 - 16 May 2023

European Society of Endocrinology 

Browse other volumes

Article tools

My recent searches

No recent searches.