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Calcium (Ca)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Total Serum Calcium – Major Mineral for Bone, Nerve, and Muscle Function)

Synonyms

  • Serum calcium
  • Total calcium
  • Ca²⁺
  • Plasma calcium
  • Bound + ionized calcium

Units of Measurement

  • mmol/L
  • µmol/L
  • mg/dL
  • mg/100 mL
  • mg%
  • mg/L
  • µg/mL
  • mEq/L

1 mmol/L Ca = 2 mEq/L (valency = 2)

Description

Calcium is the most abundant mineral in the body, essential for:

  • Bone formation
  • Muscle contraction
  • Nerve conduction
  • Blood clotting (factor activation)
  • Enzyme regulation
  • Hormonal secretion

Serum calcium is present in three forms:

  1. Free/Ionized Ca²⁺ (~50%) – biologically active
  2. Protein-bound (mainly albumin) (~40%)
  3. Complexed (~10%) – with phosphate, citrate, bicarbonate

Clinical calcium measurement typically refers to total calcium, though ionized calcium is more accurate in critical illness.

Physiological Regulation

Regulated by:

  • PTH (Parathyroid Hormone)
  • Vitamin D (1,25-dihydroxy)
  • Calcitonin (minor role)

Main target organs:

  • Bone (release calcium)
  • Kidney (reabsorption)
  • Gut (absorption)

Clinical Significance

Hypercalcemia (High Calcium)

1. Primary Hyperparathyroidism (Most common)

  • Elevated Ca + elevated/inappropriately normal PTH

2. Malignancy (Common in hospitalized patients)

  • PTHrP-producing tumors
  • Osteolytic metastases

3. Vitamin D Excess

  • Supplements
  • Granulomatous diseases (TB, sarcoidosis)

4. Medications

  • Thiazides
  • Lithium
  • Excess calcium carbonate (milk-alkali syndrome)

5. Endocrine Disorders

  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Adrenal insufficiency

Symptoms:
“Stones, bones, groans, moans, and psychiatric overtones.”

Hypocalcemia (Low Calcium)

1. Hypoparathyroidism

  • Postsurgical
  • Autoimmune
  • DiGeorge syndrome

2. Vitamin D Deficiency

  • Nutritional
  • CKD
  • Liver disease

3. Hypoalbuminemia

  • Total Ca ↓ but Ionized Ca normal

4. Acute Pancreatitis

Calcium deposition in fat.

5. Renal Failure

Hyperphosphatemia → binds calcium.

6. Drugs

  • Bisphosphonates
  • Calcitonin
  • Chemotherapy agents
  • Loop diuretics

Symptoms:
Tetany, perioral numbness, seizures, QT prolongation.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + Endocrine Society + Mayo + ARUP)

Total Serum Calcium

  • 2.15 – 2.55 mmol/L
  • 8.6 – 10.2 mg/dL

Corrected Calcium (for albumin)

Corrected Ca (mg/dL)=Measured Ca+0.8(4−albumin)\text{Corrected Ca (mg/dL)} = \text{Measured Ca} + 0.8(4 - \text{albumin})Corrected Ca (mg/dL)=Measured Ca+0.8(4−albumin)

Ionized Calcium

  • 1.10 – 1.30 mmol/L

Critical Values

  • < 6.5 mg/dL (1.6 mmol/L) → severe hypocalcemia
  • > 13 mg/dL (3.25 mmol/L) → severe hypercalcemia

Unit Meanings

UnitDescription
mmol/Lmillimole per liter
µmol/Lmicromole per liter
mg/dLmilligram per deciliter
mg%mg per 100 mL (same as mg/dL)
mg/Lmilligram per liter
µg/mLmicrogram per milliliter
mEq/Lmilliequivalent per liter

Diagnostic Uses

1. Parathyroid Disorders

  • Hyperparathyroidism
  • Hypoparathyroidism

2. Bone Health

  • Osteoporosis
  • Osteomalacia
  • CKD mineral-bone disorders

3. Malignancy

  • PTHrP-mediated hypercalcemia
  • Bone metastases

4. Critical Care

  • Pancreatitis
  • Sepsis
  • Massive transfusions (citrate binding calcium)

5. Endocrine & Vitamin D Evaluation

  • Thyroid dysfunction
  • Adrenal insufficiency
  • Vitamin D deficiency/excess

Analytical Notes

  • Serum preferred; avoid EDTA or citrate tubes (bind calcium).
  • Ionized calcium requires anaerobic collection and immediate analysis.
  • Hemolysis minimal effect.
  • Albumin-adjusted calcium needed when albumin is low.

Clinical Pearls

  • Total calcium can be misleading in hypoalbuminemia - always correct or measure ionized Ca.
  • Hypercalcemia + high PTH → primary hyperparathyroidism.
  • Hypercalcemia + low PTH → malignancy until proven otherwise.
  • Hypocalcemia with tetany → check Mg (often low and needs correction).
  • Vitamin D deficiency is a common cause of low calcium worldwide.

Interesting Fact

Calcium constitutes 99% of the body’s mineral content, primarily in bones and teeth, but the tiny 1% in serum is what maintains nerve and cardiac function.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Minerals & Electrolytes.
  2. Endocrine Society - Hypercalcemia & Hypocalcemia Guidelines.
  3. KDIGO - CKD-Mineral Bone Disorder Guidelines.
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Serum Calcium.
  5. ARUP Consult - Calcium Disorders.
  6. MedlinePlus / NIH - Calcium Test

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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