Low Preoperative Calcium Linked to Higher Postoperative Risk among elderly orthopedic patients: Study

China: Researchers have found in a new study that lower preoperative serum calcium levels are associated with an increased risk of postoperative complications in older orthopedic patients. As orthopedic surgeries in older adults continue to rise, monitoring and correcting calcium levels before surgery may help reduce complications.
- Common postoperative complications observed in the study included infections, hypoalbuminemia, and electrolyte imbalances.
- Preoperative serum calcium levels were independently associated with the risk of postoperative complications.
- Higher calcium levels showed a protective effect, reducing the likelihood of adverse postoperative outcomes.
- Patients in the lowest serum calcium group had a significantly higher risk of complications compared with those in the highest calcium group.
- Individuals with lower calcium levels had approximately 79% higher odds of developing postoperative complications.
- A nonlinear relationship was identified between serum calcium levels and complication risk.
- A threshold effect was observed at around 2.4 mmol/L.
- Below 2.4 mmol/L, the risk of complications increased significantly as calcium levels decreased.
- Above 2.4 mmol/L, the association between calcium levels and complication risk was not statistically significant.
- Subgroup analyses showed that factors such as age, sex, comorbidities, medication use, cognitive status, cardiac function, and surgical complexity did not significantly influence the relationship between calcium levels and complication risk.
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