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1.
Serum calcium-phosphorus product for predicting the risk of osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures in elderly patients: a retrospective observational study.
Ying, P, Gu, M, Jiang, X, Xu, Y, Tong, L, Xue, Y, Wang, Q, Huang, Z, Ding, W, Dai, X
Journal of orthopaedic surgery and research. 2022;(1):57
Abstract
BACKGROUND This study retrospectively analyzed and evaluated the potential correlations of serum calcium, serum phosphorus, and calcium-phosphorus product (Ca-P product) with the incidence of osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures (OVCFs), with the aim of exploring whether the Ca-P product can be used as a serological indicator to predict the risk of OVCFs. METHODS This study randomly enrolled 400 elderly patients in our hospital with OVCFs and 400 patients with hip and knee arthroplasty due to femoral head necrosis or osteoarthritis from August 2013 to April 2021. Age, sex, past medical history, and admission biochemical indicators, including albumin, blood urea nitrogen, serum creatinine, serum calcium and serum phosphorus, were collected for statistical analysis. RESULTS Albumin, serum calcium, serum phosphorus, Ca-P product, corrected serum calcium and corrected Ca-P product were lower in the OVCF group than in the non-OVCF group (P < 0.05). Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that low values of serum calcium, serum phosphorus, Ca-P product, corrected blood calcium, and corrected Ca-P product can all be risk factors for OVCF. The ROC curve showed that the Ca-P product and corrected Ca-P product were effective in predicting the risk of OVCFs. The predictive value of the Ca-P product was the best; the cutoff point was 29.88, the sensitivity was 0.72 and the specificity was 0.62. The cutoff point of the corrected Ca-P product was 30.50, the sensitivity was 0.74, and the specificity was 0.62. CONCLUSION The Ca-P product and corrected Ca-P product can be used as serological indicators to predict the risk of OVCFs in elderly individuals. Early clinical interventions targeting this risk factor can further reduce the risk of OVCFs. Also, timely and regular testing of the serum calcium and phosphorus level is recommended and encouraged for this group of people.
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2.
STIM1 Regulates Endothelial Calcium Overload and Cytokine Upregulation During Sepsis.
Qiu, X, Dong, K, Sun, R
The Journal of surgical research. 2021;:236-244
Abstract
BACKGROUND Stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1)-mediated store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) is now recognized as the main mechanism of the majority of nonexcitable cell calcium influx. Calcium overload is a primary mechanism of endothelial cell injury during systemic inflammatory response and sepsis. Whether STIM1-mediated SOCE plays a role in calcium overload in vascular endothelial cell injury remains unclear. MATERIALS AND METHODS To explore the role of STIM1-gated SOCE in vascular endothelial cell calcium overload and inflammation, we established a human septic serum or lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) experimental system and derived ribonucleic acid interference (RNAi)-mediated STIM1, ORAI1 (orai gene [HGNC: 25896 Entrez Gene: 84876] coding protein, ORAI Calcium Release-Activated Calcium Modulator 1), and transient receptor potential channel 1 (TRPC1) (core components of store-operated Ca2+[SOC]) downregulated HUVECs, as well as STIM1 overinduced HUVECs. RESULTS Our results show that sepsis serum or LPS stimulation increased STIM1 in HUVECs and increased all cytokines except for VEGF and the inflammatory mediators tumor necrosis factor, intercellular cell adhesion molecule-1, and endothelin-1 in a time-dependent manner. RNAi-mediated knockdown of STIM1 significantly inhibited serum or LPS-induced inflammatory cytokine expression, and STIM1 overexpression in HUVECs promoted LPS-mediated induction of these cytokines. Meanwhile, similar to the blocking effect of the specific SOC inhibitors Gd3+ and La3+ on LPS-induced calcium influx, RNAi-mediated depletion of STIM1 or the SOC proteins TRPC1 and ORAI1 could significantly inhibit serum or LPS-induced extracellular calcium influx, as well as the expression of the inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor, intercellular cell adhesion molecule-1, and endothelin-1. Simultaneous downregulation of the SOCE core units TRPC1 and ORAI1 inhibited LPS-induced calcium influx and cytokine expression, which could not be restored by inducing STIM1. Forced expression of nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) in HUVECs significantly induced STIM1 expression, whereas RNAi-mediated depletion of NF-κB significantly inhibited STIM1 mRNA levels and significantly reduced the thapsigargin-mediated SOCE calcium influx, which was similar to results with the NF-κB inhibitor wogonin. CONCLUSIONS Septic serum stimulates the expression of STIM1, cytokines, and inflammatory mediators in HUVECs. STIM1-mediated SOCE is required for Ca2+ influx induced by LPS or septic serum and contributes cytokines and inflammatory mediators in septic serum-stimulated HUVECs. In addition, STIM1-mediated SOCE on Ca2+ influx by septic serum or LPS involves NF-κB signaling.
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Derivation of a Coronary Age Calculator Using Traditional Risk Factors and Coronary Artery Calcium: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis.
Blaha, MJ, Naazie, IN, Cainzos-Achirica, M, Dardari, ZA, DeFilippis, AP, McClelland, RL, Mirbolouk, M, Orimoloye, OA, Dzaye, O, Nasir, K, et al
Journal of the American Heart Association. 2021;(6):e019351
Abstract
Background The optimal method for communicating coronary heart disease (CHD) risk to individual patients is not yet clear. Recent research supports the concept of "coronary age" for more effective risk communication. We defined an individual's coronary age as the age at which an average healthy individual would have an equivalent estimated CHD risk as that calculated for the index individual, building on our previously validated MESA (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) 10-year CHD Risk Score equations with and without coronary artery calcium (CAC). Methods and Results We derived a coronary age by (1) calculating the MESA 10-year CHD risk; (2) mathematically setting this equal to an equation describing risk of an average healthy MESA participant, as a function of age; and (3) solving for age. The risk discrimination of the resultant coronary age was compared with that of chronological age, the MESA CHD Risk Score, and CAC alone. Approximately 95% of coronary age values ranged from 30 years less to 30 years higher than chronological age. Although the mean chronological age of individuals experiencing CHD events compared with those free of events was 67.4 versus 61.8 years, the difference in coronary age including CAC was larger (80.6 versus 62.8 years). Coronary age with CAC had identical predictive ability to that of MESA CHD Risk Score and outperformed chronological age and CAC alone. Conclusions The newly derived coronary age is a convenient transformation of MESA CHD Risk, retaining very good risk discrimination. This easy-to-communicate tool will be available for patients and clinicians, potentially facilitating risk communication in routine care.
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Serum Calcium and Vitamin D levels: Correlation with severity of COVID-19 in hospitalized patients in Royal Hospital, Oman.
Osman, W, Al Fahdi, F, Al Salmi, I, Al Khalili, H, Gokhale, A, Khamis, F
International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases. 2021;:153-163
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Studies have revealed hypocalcemia and low vitamin D levels in severe covid-19 that warrant further research. OBJECTIVE Our study investigates the correlation between calcium levels at presentation as a primary endpoint and pre-existing calcium levels as a secondary endpoint to the severity of disease presentation and progression. METHOD Observational cohort study in adults admitted with COVID-19 from March utill September 2020. Multiple clinical scales and laboratory parameters were used to correlate corrected calcium and vitamin D associations with risk factors and outcomes. RESULTS Four hundred and forty five patients were included in the study. Hypocalcemic patients had more abnormal laboratory parameters and longer hospitalization duration. Hypocalcemia was in 60-75% of all age groups (p-value 0.053), for which 77.97% were ICU admissions (p-value 0.001) and 67.02% were diabetic (p-value 0.347). There were non-significant correlations between Vitamin D and almost all the parameters except for chronic respiratory diseases, which had a P-value of 0.024. CONCLUSION It can be concluded that hypocalcemia is a significant and reliable marker of disease severity and progression regardless of underlying comorbidities. Vitamin D levels fail to reflect correlation with severity of COVID-19 infections.
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Low serum calcium and phosphorus and their clinical performance in detecting COVID-19 patients.
Yang, C, Ma, X, Wu, J, Han, J, Zheng, Z, Duan, H, Liu, Q, Wu, C, Dong, Y, Dong, L
Journal of medical virology. 2021;(3):1639-1651
Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the clinical performance of low serum calcium and phosphorus in discriminative diagnosis of the severity of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We conducted a single-center hospital-based study and consecutively recruited 122 suspected and 104 confirmed patients with COVID-19 during January 24 to April 25, 2020. Clinical risk factors of COVID-19 were identified. The discriminative power of low calcium and phosphorus regarding the disease severity was evaluated. Low calcium and low phosphorus are more prevalent in severe or critical COVID-19 patients than moderate COVID-19 patients (odds ratio [OR], 15.07; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.59-143.18 for calcium; OR, 6.90; 95% CI, 2.43-19.64 for phosphorus). The specificity in detecting the severe or critical patients among COVID-19 patients reached 98.5% (95% CI, 92.0%-99.7%) and 84.8% (95% CI, 74.3%-91.6%) by low calcium and low phosphorus, respectively, albeit with suboptimal sensitivity. Calcium and phosphorus combined with lymphocyte count could obtain the best discriminative performance for the severe COVID-19 patients (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.80), and combined with oxygenation index was promising (AUC = 0.71). Similar discriminative performances of low calcium and low phosphorus were found between suspected and confirmed COVID-19 patient. Low calcium and low phosphorus could indicate the severity of COVID-19 patients, and may be utilized as promising clinical biomarkers for discriminative diagnosis.
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The Prevalence of Hypomagnesemia in Hospitalized Type 2 Diabetic Patients Treated with Diuretics and/or Proton Pump Inhibitors.
Mengesha, B, Levi, D, Kroonenberg, M, Koren, R, Golik, A, Koren, S
The Israel Medical Association journal : IMAJ. 2021;(4):245-250
Abstract
BACKGROUND Hypomagnesemia (serum magnesium level < 1.7 mg/dl) occurs more frequently in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).Serum magnesium levels are not routinely tested in hospitalized patients, including in hospitalized patients with T2DM. OBJECTIVES To evaluate the prevalence of hypomagnesemia among hospitalized T2DM patients treated with proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and/or diuretics. METHODS A total of 263 T2DM patients hospitalized in general departments were included in the study and were further divided into four groups: group 1 (patients not treated with PPIs or diuretics), group 2 (patients treated with PPIs), group 3 (patients treated with diuretics), and group 4 (patients treated with both PPIs and diuretics). Blood and urine samples were taken during the first 24 hours of admission. Electrocardiogram was performed on admission. RESULTS Of the 263 T2DM patients, 58 (22.1%) had hypomagnesemia (serum magnesium level < 1.7 mg/dl). Patients in group 2 had the lowest mean serum magnesium level (1.79 mg/dl ± 0.27). Relatively more patients with hypomagnesemia were found in group 2 compared to the other groups, although a statistically significant difference was not observed. Significantly more patients in group 3 and 4 had chronic renal failure. Patients with hypomagnesemia had significantly lower serum calcium levels. CONCLUSIONS Hospitalized T2DM patients under PPI therapy are at risk for hypomagnesemia and hypocalcemia.
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Serum Calcium Level Combined with Platelet Count May Be Useful Indicators for Assisted Diagnosis of Extremity Posttraumatic Osteomyelitis: A Comparative Analysis.
Liu, GQ, Jiang, N, Hu, YJ, Lin, QR, Wang, L, Yu, B
Disease markers. 2021;:6196663
Abstract
BACKGROUND A previous study had reported that patients with osteomyelitis (OM) appeared to be more likely to develop hypocalcemia before and after surgery. Calcium sulfate (CS) is frequently used as a local antibiotic vehicle in the treatment of OM, which may also affect serum calcium level. However, whether changes of serum calcium level are caused by OM and/or local use of calcium sulfate remains unclear. Also, platelet (PLT) count plays a crucial predictive role in periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs), but its role in assisted diagnosis of OM is largely unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine whether serum calcium level and PLT count may be helpful in assisted diagnosis of PTOM. METHODS Between January 2013 and December 2018, we analyzed 468 consecutive patients (392 males and 76 females), including 170 patients with posttraumatic OM (PTOM), 130 patients with aseptic bone nonunion (ABN), and 168 patients recovered from fractures with requirement of implant removal set as controls. Preoperative serological levels of calcium, phosphorus, and PLT were detected, and comparisons were conducted among the above three groups. Additionally, correlations and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were displayed to test whether calcium level and PLT can differentiate patients with ABN and PTOM. RESULTS Outcomes showed that the incidences of asymptomatic hypocalcemia (PTOM vs. ABN vs. controls = 22.94% vs. 6.92% vs. 8.82%, χ 2 = 21.098, P < 0.001) and thrombocytosis (PTOM vs. ABN vs. controls = 35.3% vs. 13.84% vs. 12.35%, χ 2 = 28.512, P < 0.001) were highest in PTOM patients. Besides, the mean serological levels of phosphorus in PTOM and ABN patients were significantly higher than those in the controls (P = 0.007). The Area Under the Curve (AUC) of the ROC curve outcomes revealed that, with the combination of serum calcium level with PLT count, the predictive role was acceptable (AUC 0.730, P < 0.001, 95% CI 0.681-0.780). Also, serological levels of calcium of 2.225 mmol/L and PLT count of 246.5 × 109/L were identified as the optimal cut-off values to distinguish patients with and without PTOM. However, age- and gender-related differences in serum calcium levels (age, P = 0.056; gender, P = 0.978) and PLT count (age, P = 0.363; gender, P = 0.799) were not found to be statistically significant in any groups. In addition, no significant correlations were identified between serum calcium level and PLT count (R = 0.010, P = 0.839). CONCLUSIONS Asymptomatic hypocalcemia and thrombocytosis appeared to be more frequent in this cohort with PTOM. Serological levels of calcium and PLT count may be useful biomarkers in screening patients suspected of PTOM.
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Aberrant serum parathyroid hormone, calcium, and phosphorus as risk factors for peritonitis in peritoneal dialysis patients.
Liao, CT, Zheng, CM, Lin, YC, Wu, MY, Lin, YF, Hsu, YH, Hsu, CC, Wu, MS
Scientific reports. 2021;(1):1171
Abstract
Identifying modifiable risk factors of peritoneal dialysis (PD)-related peritonitis is of clinical importance in patient care. Mineral bone disease (MBD) has been associated with mortality and morbidity in end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) patients. However, its influence on PD related peritonitis due to altered host immunity remains elusive. This study investigated whether abnormal biomarkers of MBD are associated with the development of peritonitis in patients undergoing maintenance PD. We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study, analysing data derived from a nationwide dialysis registry database in Taiwan, from 2005 to 2012. A total of 5750 ESKD patients commencing PD therapy during this period were enrolled and followed up to 60 months or by the end of the study period. The patients were stratified based on their baseline serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels, calcium (Ca) levels or phosphorus (P) levels, respectively or in combinations. The primary outcome was the occurrence of first episode of peritonitis, and patient outcomes such as deaths, transfer to haemodialysis or receiving renal transplantation were censored. Peritonitis-free survival and the influence of PTH, Ca, P (individual or in combination) on the peritonitis occurrence were analysed. A total of 5750 PD patients was enrolled. Of them, 1611 patients experienced their first episode of peritonitis during the study period. Patients with low PTH, high Ca or low P levels, respectively or in combination, had the lowest peritonitis-free survival. After adjusting for age, sex and serum albumin levels, we found that the combinations of low PTH levels with either high Ca levels or low/normal P levels were significant risk factors of developing peritonitis. Abnormal mineral bone metabolism in maintenance PD patients with low serum PTH levels, in combination with either high Ca levels or low/normal P levels, could be novel risk factors of PD-related peritonitis.
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Association of Statin Treatment With Progression of Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaque Composition.
van Rosendael, AR, van den Hoogen, IJ, Gianni, U, Ma, X, Tantawy, SW, Bax, AM, Lu, Y, Andreini, D, Al-Mallah, MH, Budoff, MJ, et al
JAMA cardiology. 2021;(11):1257-1266
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Abstract
IMPORTANCE The density of atherosclerotic plaque forms the basis for categorizing calcified and noncalcified morphology of plaques. OBJECTIVE To assess whether alterations in plaque across a range of density measurements provide a more detailed understanding of atherosclerotic disease progression. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This cohort study enrolled 857 patients who underwent serial coronary computed tomography angiography 2 or more years apart and had quantitative measurements of coronary plaques throughout the entire coronary artery tree. The study was conducted from 2013 to 2016 at 13 sites in 7 countries. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The main outcome was progression of plaque composition of individual coronary plaques. Six plaque composition types were defined on a voxel-level basis according to the plaque attenuation (expressed in Hounsfield units [HU]): low attenuation (-30 to 75 HU), fibro-fatty (76-130 HU), fibrous (131-350 HU), low-density calcium (351-700 HU), high-density calcium (701-1000 HU), and 1K (>1000 HU). The progression rates of these 6 compositional plaque types were evaluated according to the interaction between statin use and baseline plaque volume, adjusted for risk factors and time interval between scans. Plaque progression was also examined based on baseline calcium density. Analysis was performed among lesions matched at baseline and follow-up. Data analyses were conducted from August 2019 through March 2020. RESULTS In total, 2458 coronary lesions in 857 patients (mean [SD] age, 62.1 [8.7] years; 540 [63.0%] men; 548 [63.9%] received statin therapy) were included. Untreated coronary lesions increased in volume over time for all 6 compositional types. Statin therapy was associated with volume decreases in low-attenuation plaque (β, -0.02; 95% CI, -0.03 to -0.01; P = .001) and fibro-fatty plaque (β, -0.03; 95% CI, -0.04 to -0.02; P < .001) and greater progression of high-density calcium plaque (β, 0.02; 95% CI, 0.01-0.03; P < .001) and 1K plaque (β, 0.02; 95% CI, 0.01-0.03; P < .001). When analyses were restricted to lesions without low-attenuation plaque or fibro-fatty plaque at baseline, statin therapy was not associated with a change in overall calcified plaque volume (β, -0.03; 95% CI, -0.08 to 0.02; P = .24) but was associated with a transformation toward more dense calcium. Interaction analysis between baseline plaque volume and calcium density showed that more dense coronary calcium was associated with less plaque progression. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The results suggest an association of statin use with greater rates of transformation of coronary atherosclerosis toward high-density calcium. A pattern of slower overall plaque progression was observed with increasing density. All findings support the concept of reduced atherosclerotic risk with increased densification of calcium.
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Evaluation of Vitamin D (25OHD), Bone Alkaline Phosphatase (BALP), Serum Calcium, Serum Phosphorus, Ionized Calcium in Patients with Mandibular Third Molar Impaction. An Observational Study.
Crincoli, V, Cazzolla, AP, Di Comite, M, Lo Muzio, L, Ciavarella, D, Dioguardi, M, Bizzoca, ME, Palmieri, G, Fontana, A, Giustino, A, et al
Nutrients. 2021;(6)
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the levels of vitamin D (25OHD) and other bone biomarkers in patients with third molar impaction (TMI). Thirty males and 30 females with unilateral or bilateral impacted mandibular third molar, and 15 males and 15 females as a control group (CG) were recruited. Rx-OPT was used to evaluate dental position and Pederson index to measure the difficulty of the intervention. Bone biomarkers were measured through blood venous sample in TMI group and CG. Mann-Whitney test, Pearson's correlation coefficient, linear regression model were used to compare the different parameters in the two groups. 25OHD showed lower values in TMI group than in CG (p < 0.05) with values significantly lower in bilateral impaction (p < 0.05). Pearson's coefficient for 25OHD presented a negative correlation with the Pederson index (ρ = -0.75). Bone alkaline phosphatase (BALP) showed significantly lower dosage in TMI group than CG (p = 0.02), Pearson's coefficient for BALP presented a negative correlation with the Pederson index. Serum calcium, serum phosphorus, ionized calcium levels in TMI and CG groups were similar and Mann-Whitney test did not significantly differ between TMI and CG. TMI could be a sign of vitamin D deficiency and of low BALP levels that should be investigated.