Pathophysiologic and clinical correlates of hypophosphatemia and the relationship with sepsis and outcome in postoperative patients after hepatectomy
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Hypophosphatemia in critically ill and postoperative (p.o.) patients is a
multifactorial event, and is also related to severity of illness. This
study was conducted to assess pathophysiologic correlates of
hypophosphatemia and the simultaneous relationship with clinical events
after hepatectomy. A total of 333 measurements were obtained in 59
patients: these were performed preoperatively and at p.o. days 1, 3, and 7
in all patients, and subsequently, until recovery or death, only in those
with complications. Measurements included plasma phosphate together with a
large number of additional blood chemistries, taking into account primary
and associated diseases, events associated with the operation, doses of
parenteral substrates, occurrence of sepsis or other p.o. complications,
outcome, and a consistent set of complementary variables. Plasma phosphate
decreased at p.o. days 1 and 3 (P < 0.001) and retumed to a level close to
baseline at p.o. day 7. Regression analysis showed that phosphate was
related simultaneously to patient age (inversely), levels of creatinine
and potassium (directly), and dose of parenteral amino acids (inversely; P
< 0.001 for all). Independently of covariation with these variables, there
was a decrement in phosphate at p.o. days 1 and 3 that was related
specifically to p.o. condition; this decrement had a general component
common to all patients, an additional component related to duration of
previous hepatic ischemia at surgery, and a further component predictive
of the subsequent development of complications (in most cases, sepsis).
Plasma phosphate at p.o. day 1 was related inversely to APACHE II score
(r2 = 0.4, P < 0.001), and levels lower than 1.5 mg/dL were associated
with an almost 4-fold increase in the rate of complications compared with
cases with higher phosphate (P < 0.001). The best single variable bridging
early evidence of hypophosphatemia to subsequent development of
complications was plasma cholesterol, which fell significantly from p.o.
day 3 onward in patients with complications compared with those recovering
normally (P < 0.01), and in nonsurvivors compared with survivors (P <
0.01). Hypophosphatemia may anticipate clinical evidence of complications
by reflecting an early stronger acute-phase response, with shift of
phosphate from intra- to extravascular space, or true phosphorus
deficiency, which may favor development of complications by impairing high-
energy substrate availability for host defense and other cell functions.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Giovannini, Ivo; Chiarla, Carlo
Published in: