Brian G Cornelius, Daniel Clark, Ben Williams, Anna Rogers, Andreea Popa, Phillip Kilgore, Urska Cvek, Marjan Trutschl, Kevin Boykin, Angela Cornelius
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For the remaining numeric variables, association was determined one-way analysis of variance (when comparing all classes) or Welch's two-sample t-test (when comparing subsets based on calcium or mortality). In any event, significance was determined using α=0.05. A total of 2,928 patients were identified, 1623 were excluded, primarily due to incomplete data. Patients were predominantly male following blunt trauma. Initial calcium levels were 8.73 mg/dL, 95% CI [4-10.9] and 8.97 mg/dL, 95% CI [6.42-13.1] when correcting for albumin levels. Acute declines were noted when comparing initial and corrected serum calcium levels in patients requiring transfusion (7.99 mg/dL and 8.72 mg/dL) and operative intervention (8.54 mg/dL and 8.91 mg/dL). 456 (34.9%) patients required operative intervention, 138 (10.6%) required transfusion and 29 (2.2%) required massive transfusion. Patients in our cohort arrived with calcium values on the low end of normal, with a trend towards hypocalcemia if operative intervention or blood transfusion was required. This has been previously associated with increased mortality. Patients requiring operative intervention and transfusion are at increased risk for hypocalcemia and recognition of this potential is key for improved outcomes.</p>","PeriodicalId":45488,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Burns and Trauma","volume":"11 3","pages":"267-274"},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8310872/pdf/ijbt0011-0267.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A retrospective analysis of calcium levels in pediatric trauma patients.\",\"authors\":\"Brian G Cornelius, Daniel Clark, Ben Williams, Anna Rogers, Andreea Popa, Phillip Kilgore, Urska Cvek, Marjan Trutschl, Kevin Boykin, Angela Cornelius\",\"doi\":\"\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Traumatic injury is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in pediatric patients. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
外伤是导致儿科患者发病和死亡的主要原因。出血是造成这些后果的一个已知但可治疗的因素。有证据表明,重大创伤患者是低钙血症的高危人群,但儿科低钙血症的发生率却没有记录。本研究的目的是确定儿科创伤患者低钙血症的发生率,并调查低钙血症与输血和手术干预需求之间的相关性。在获得 IRB 批准后,我们对在成人一级、儿科二级创伤中心就诊的所有儿科创伤患者进行了回顾性分析。死亡率的显著性检验采用 Pearson's χ2 检验。其余数字变量的关联性则通过单因素方差分析(比较所有等级时)或韦尔奇双样本 t 检验(比较基于钙或死亡率的子集时)来确定。在任何情况下,显著性均以α=0.05来确定。共确定了 2928 名患者,其中有 1623 人被排除在外,主要原因是数据不完整。钝性创伤后的患者以男性为主。初始血钙水平为 8.73 mg/dL,95% CI [4-10.9];校正白蛋白水平后为 8.97 mg/dL,95% CI [6.42-13.1]。需要输血(7.99 毫克/分升和 8.72 毫克/分升)和手术干预(8.54 毫克/分升和 8.91 毫克/分升)的患者初始血清钙水平与校正后的血清钙水平相比,均出现急剧下降。456例(34.9%)患者需要手术干预,138例(10.6%)需要输血,29例(2.2%)需要大量输血。我们队列中的患者到达时血钙值处于正常值的低端,如果需要手术干预或输血,则有低钙血症的趋势。这与死亡率增加有关。需要手术干预和输血的患者发生低钙血症的风险增加,认识到这一可能性是改善预后的关键。
A retrospective analysis of calcium levels in pediatric trauma patients.
Traumatic injury is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in pediatric patients. Hemorrhage is a known but treatable component of these outcomes. Evidence exists that major trauma patients are at high risk for hypocalcemia but the rate of pediatric occurrence is not documented. The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of hypocalcemia in pediatric trauma patients, as well as to investigate any correlation between hypocalcemia and the need for transfusion and operative intervention. After IRB approval a retrospective analysis was conducted of all pediatric trauma patients seen in our Adult Level One, Pediatric Level Two trauma center. Significance testing for mortality was performed using Pearson's χ2 test. For the remaining numeric variables, association was determined one-way analysis of variance (when comparing all classes) or Welch's two-sample t-test (when comparing subsets based on calcium or mortality). In any event, significance was determined using α=0.05. A total of 2,928 patients were identified, 1623 were excluded, primarily due to incomplete data. Patients were predominantly male following blunt trauma. Initial calcium levels were 8.73 mg/dL, 95% CI [4-10.9] and 8.97 mg/dL, 95% CI [6.42-13.1] when correcting for albumin levels. Acute declines were noted when comparing initial and corrected serum calcium levels in patients requiring transfusion (7.99 mg/dL and 8.72 mg/dL) and operative intervention (8.54 mg/dL and 8.91 mg/dL). 456 (34.9%) patients required operative intervention, 138 (10.6%) required transfusion and 29 (2.2%) required massive transfusion. Patients in our cohort arrived with calcium values on the low end of normal, with a trend towards hypocalcemia if operative intervention or blood transfusion was required. This has been previously associated with increased mortality. Patients requiring operative intervention and transfusion are at increased risk for hypocalcemia and recognition of this potential is key for improved outcomes.