NUTRITIONAL STATUS , VITAMIN D AND NASAL COLONIZATION IN SPINAL SURGERY ESTADO NUTRICIONAL

Objective: Evaluate the nutritional status, vitamin D, the serum albumin, and the nasal colonization by bacteria in a Brazilian population sample that included specifically patients undergoing spine surgery Methods: The serum albumin and vitamin D tests were performed on blood samples; nasal microbiological research was performed by swab and demographic information was collected. We studied the correlation between the tests and gender and age groups of patients. Results: Seventy-five patients were included. Of this total, 74 patients underwent testing of albumin levels, 64 of vitamin D and 41 underwent nasal swab. The mean of serum albumin was 3.76 g/ dl (SD = 0.53 g/dl); 70.3% of subjects were considered normal and 29.7% showed hypoalbuminemia. Regarding vitamin D, the mean was 16.64 ng/ml (SD: 7.43 ng/ml); 64.1% of patients were considered deficient, 32.8% insufficient, and 3.1% were considered normal. There was significant difference between albumin and age (p=0.007), being that the greater the age, the lower the albumin. Hypoalbuminemia was significantly more frequent over 60 years (p<0.001). There was no correlation between vitamin D or nasal swab and age (p=0.603 and 0.725, respectively). The correlation between the tests and gender showed no significant difference in any of the parameters. Conclusion: The serum albumin and vitamin D levels and results of nasal swab were presented for a Brazilian sample of patients undergoing spine surgery. It was found correlation between hypoalbuminemia (inferring malnutrition) and age group of patients. Almost all the patients had some degree of vitamin D deficiency, with no correlation with age.


INTRODUCTION
Several systemic factors can affect the rate of complications following spine surgery, possibly compromising the clinical outcome.The nutritional state of the patient stands out among these factors, having been shown to have a negative impact on the rate of healing, to increase the rate of infection, and to affect the consolidation of the arthrodesis. 1,2However, malnutrition is frequently not identified during preoperative preparation of individuals who will undergo spine surgery.One of the main indicators of malnutrition is serum albumin lower than 3.5 g/dL. 3,4Serum albumin is the most abundant plasmatic protein and hypoalbuminemia affects the vascular diffusion of nutrients with repercussions for the immune system and for the maintenance of homeostasis in the organism. 4nother nutrient of more recently recognized importance is vitamin D, which actually is a liposoluble steroidal hormone with a fundamental function in mineral homeostasis and bone metabolism. 5,6Changes in the levels of serum vitamin D can be caused by a deficient diet, but also by intestinal absorption disorders and even by extrinsic factors like lack of sun exposure.6][7] Recently, Stoker et al. 6 studied the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in patients who underwent spine surgery in the same service in the US, reporting a rate of insufficiency in 57% and a rate of deficiency in 27% of the individuals.
Besides the nutritional condition of patients who have undergone spine surgery, another factor that can predispose them to complications is nasal colonization by bacteria, especially Staphylococcus aureus.][10][11] A recent study showed that 18.4% of hospitalized patients tested positive for S. aureus. 11The study also showed that identification and decolonization significantly reduced the rate of general and postoperative infections when compared to the individuals treated with the placebo.
However, the information regarding the occurrence of malnutrition, identified by hypoalbuminemia, vitamin D deficiency, and nasal colonization by bacteria comes from studies of other populations, as there was a lack of information in our study.The objective of this study was to evaluate and describe the epidemiological profile of a Brazilian population consisting of individuals who underwent spinal surgery under these nutritional conditions and with bacterial colonization.

METHODS
The study was a prospective observational epidemiological analysis involving patients who underwent spine surgery procedures in the same service between February and November of 2014.The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (CAAE: 39410114100005463).
All patients who underwent spine surgery and who, following orientation about the study objectives, agreed to and signed the informed consent form, including minors whose legal guardians agreed to and signed it, were included in the study.In the study, were included patients with different kind of surgical procedures and different pathologies diagnoses, including deformity, cervical and lumbar degenerative disease, trauma and tumors.Only patients who did not agree to sign the consent form or those with problems with their laboratory exam results were excluded.
The night before the surgical procedure, a blood sample nasal en una muestra de población brasileña de pacientes sometidos a cirugía de la columna vertebral.Hubo una correlación entre hipoalbuminemia, infiriéndose la desnutrición, y el grupo de edad de los pacientes.Casi todos los pacientes tenían algún grado de deficiencia de vitamina D, sin correlación con la edad.
was taken to measure the levels of serum albumin and vitamin D and the patient underwent a microbiological nasal swab.Patient demographic information was obtained including age, gender, weight, height, race, smoking status, alcohol consumption, and hospitalization time.Comorbidity analysis was conducted via an anesthesiological evaluation, according to the scale proposed by the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA).The parameters obtained were considered according to the following scheme: normal serum albumin concentration is from 3.5 to 5.5 g/dL, 4 values less than 3.5 g/dL being considered hypoalbuminemia.The serum concentration of vitamin D is evaluated by 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH), 5 with values less than 30 ng/mL considered to be insufficiency and values less than 20 ng/mL considered as deficiency. 5,12An identification of bacterial colonization was made via the microbiological culture of material collected by nasal swab, in search primarily of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (ORSA).
A comparison of the albumin and vitamin D values and of the positivity of the nasal swab was conducted between the genders and the different age groups (Group 1 -younger than 18 years of age; Group 2 -from 18 to 39; Group 3 -from 40 to 59; and Group 4 -60 years of age or older).The ANOVA technique was used for the statistical analysis of the age groups and the Student's t-test was used for the genders.The tests were performed with a level of significance of 5%.

RESULTS
Seventy-five patients were included in the study, 47 of them women (62.7%) and 28 men (37.3%).They were divided into age groups: 7 patients (9.3%) were younger than 18 years old, five (6.7%) were from 18 and 39 years, 29 (38,7%) from 40 to 59, and 34 (45.3%) were 60 years or older.Of the total population, 74 patients were tested for albumin, 64 for vitamin D, and 41 had a nasal swab taken.Table 1 shows the distribution of the patients by gender and age group and the average values of albumin and vitamin D, as well as the classification of albumin into normal and hypoalbuminemia categories, of vitamin D into normal, insufficient, and deficient, and of nasal swabs into positive and negative.
The average of albumin value was 3.76 g/dL among the patients (SD: 0.53 g/dL), ranging from 2.3 to 4.7 g/dL.Considering values between 3.5 and 5.5 g/dL to be normal, 70.3% (52/74) of the individuals had normal results and 29.7% (22/74) had values below the cutoff.The average vitamin D count was 16.64 ng/mL (SD: 7.43 ng/mL), with values obtained between 4.8 and 31.5 ng/mL.In relation to the classification of the level of vitamin D, we observed that 3.1% (2/64) of the patients had a normal level (≥ 30 ng/mL), 32.8% (21/64) had a level considered to be insufficient (between 20 and 30 ng/mL), and 64.1 (41/64) had deficient levels (< 20 ng/mL).The final parameter analyzed, the results from the nasal swab, showed that 4 (9.8%)patients had positive results, 2 of whom (4.9%) tested positive for MRSA.
The analysis of the correlation between the exam results and the patient age groups (Table 2) showed that there was a significant difference in the albumin level in relation to age (p = 0.007): the older the age group, the lower the albumin value.The occurrence of hypoalbuminemia in relation to age group was significantly higher in individuals 60 years of age or older (p<0.001).However, no correlation was observed between the values of vitamin D or the results of the nasal swab and age (p = 0.603 and 0.725, respectively).
The analysis of the correlation between the exam results and gender (Table 3) showed no significant difference in any of the parameters.The average albumin values and the occurrence of hypoalbuminemia were statistically similar between the sexes, with p values equal to 0.230 and 0.865, respectively.There was also a statistical similarity between the sexes in the average values of vitamin D (p = 0.568) and their categorizations as normal, insufficient, and deficient (p = 0.633).All four patients with positive nasal swabs were female, but the statistical comparison between the sexes was similar in terms of the positivity of the exam (p = 0.118).

DISCUSSION
It is mandatory an extensive preoperative evaluation prior to the complex surgery, including complex spinal surgeries.As part of this evaluation, an analysis of the nutritional condition of the patient, which can be determined by the level of serum albumin, 3,4 is critical, as an increased rate of complications has been documented in spine surgery as a result of malnutrition.
The results of this study show that the average level of albumin in the sample was 3.76 (SD: 0.53), higher than the reference value (3.5 g/dL), and that most patients (70.3%) had normal albumin levels.However, we observed a significant reduction in the average values of albumin on patients of the older age group (p = 0.007), with a significant increase in the occurrence of hypoalbuminemia.Taking the 60 years of age or older group into account, 18 patients (52.9%) had hypoalbuminemia, while 16 (47.1%)had normal levels of albumin.These data agree with the observations of Lenke et al., 2 who noted a worse nutritional state, including an albumin analysis, in more elderly individuals.There was neither any significant correlation between the average albumin values nor between the occurrences of hypoalbuminemia and the gender of the patients.
Another nutrient that plays an important role in mineral homeostasis and bone quality is vitamin D, 5,6 recently recognized as a hormone.One article reported an average of 35 ng/mL of vitamin D and values considered to be normal in 57% of the individuals who underwent orthopedic surgery. 13A recent study reported a prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in a population of patients who had undergone arthrodesis of the spine, with an Patients in the study did not take all the tests.
Coluna/Columna.2016;15(1):40-3  average value of 29.1 ng/mL (SD: 14.1), an insufficiency rate of 57%, and a deficiency rate of 27%. 14In the results from our study, we observed that the occurrence of hypovitaminosis D was even higher, with an insufficiency rate of 32.8% and a deficiency rate of 64.1%, and only 3.1% of the patients with a normal rate of vitamin D, as well as a much lower average value of vitamin D at 16.64 ng/mL (SD: 7.43 ng/mL).Despite the significant reduction in the metabolism of vitamin D in the skin of elderly individuals, 5 neither study identified an inverse correlation between age and amount of vitamin D. 6,13 In the study by Stoker and collaborators, 6 the patients with vitamin D deficiency were significantly younger than those who were not deficient in vitamin D (p < 0.01), most of them younger than 50 years of age.In our study, there was no significant correlation between the average value of vitamin D and the age group (p = 0.666) or between the occurrence of insufficiency or deficiency and age group (p = 0.603).There was no significant correlation between either average vitamin D values or the occurrence of hypovitaminosis D and the gender of the patients.
Subjects who live in regions at higher latitudes, more distant from the equator, are less predisposed to ultraviolet radiation exposure, which is responsible for the metabolism of vitamin D in the skin, and they tend to have lower serum levels of vitamin D. However, while the study by Stoker and collaborators involved patients from the region around Saint Louis, MO, in the United States, at a latitude of 38° N, the patients in this study were from the environs of São Paulo, SP, at a latitude of 23° S and had lower values of vitamin D. However, while the study by Stoker and collaborators involved patients from the region around Saint Louis, MO, in the United States, at a latitude of 38° N, the patients in this study were from the environs of São Paulo, SP, at a latitude of 23° S and had lower amounts of vitamin D. A possible cause could be the use of dietary supplements, more common in countries like the USA than in Brazil.
[10] One randomized, double-blind study reported that the nasal swab results of 1251 out of 6771 patients (18.4%) tested positive for S. aureus, all of them methicillin-susceptible.The results of this study, despite the much smaller number of nasal swabs collected than that obtained in the study described, show that 4 out of 41 patients (9.8%) tested positive for S. aureus.However, in 2 patients (50% of the positive cases and 4.9% of the total sample) with positive nasal swabs, the bacteria isolated (S. aureus) was resistant to oxacillin.There was no correlation between the positivity of the nasal swab and the patient age groups (p = 0.725) or with the gender of the individuals (p = 0.118).
Although all the parameters analyzed were associated with an increased rate of surgical complications, the objective of this study was to present data about a sample population of Brazilian patients who underwent spinal surgery, information that has not been made available before.No correlation analysis was performed between the albumin level (inferring malnutrition), vitamin D level, and nasal swab results and the postoperative clinical outcomes of the patients included in the study.However, we are collecting data about the patient complications and clinical outcomes, prospectively, to be able to conduct this analysis as soon as possible.

CONCLUSIONS
This study presents data about the status of albumin, vitamin D, and nasal swabs in a population sample of Brazilian patients who underwent spinal surgery, information that has been unavailable to the date.There was a correlation between hypoalbuminemia, inferring malnutrition, and an increase in the patient age group.Almost all patients had some degree of hypovitaminosis D, but with no correlation with age group.

Table 1 .
Description of personal characteristics and the laboratory tests performed.

Table 2 .
Description of laboratory tests evaluated by patient age group and statistical correlation.

Table 3 .
Description of laboratory tests evaluated by sex of patients and statistical correlation.