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Calcium Ionized

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Low ionized calcium levels are common in critically ill patients with sepsis, renal failure, cardiac failure, pulmonary failure, post-surgery or burns. Monitoring of ionized calcium is particularly important in the unconscious or anesthetized patient, in whom unrecognized changes in calcium homeostasis may result in serious cardiovascular dysfunction with little of no prior warning signs. Decreased ionized calcium levels between 3 and 4 mg/dL are usually well tolerated, but the risk of cardiac arrest increases when ionized calcium levels approach 2.5 mg/dL. An ionized calcium level below 2.8 mg/dL is a reasonable threshold to begin calcium replacement therapy. Patients with hypotension or low cardiac output may require calcium replacement when ionized calcium falls below 3.2 to 3.6 mg/dL. Replacement therapy should be monitored with Ionized calcium levels.



Measurement of ionized calcium may also be helpful in evaluating neonatal hypocalcemia, and for monitoring hypo- or hypercalcemia associated with malignancy and pancreatitis. Ionized calcium is valuable in establishing a diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism, especially in borderline cases where total calcium levels may be normal but ionized calcium increased.

In these clinical situations, total calcium is often difficult to interpret or misleading due to decreased albumin and other proteins, acid-base disturbances, and transfusion of citrated blood. Alterations in serum albumin during an acute illness may change the total serum calcium by as much as 30%. Nomograms and formulas for indirect prediction of free calcium levels are inaccurate and may under-diagnose hypocalcemia. The percentage of protein bound calcium may vary from 30 to 50% during illness. Acute acidosis decreases protein binding, while acute alkalosis increases it. Free fatty acids often increase during illness and after administration of heparin, isproterenol and insulin. They increase calcium binding to albumin. Changes in the concentration of anions such as phosphate, bicarbonate, and citrate also change ionized calcium levels. Transfusion of large numbers of blood components, containing excess citrate, may chelate calcium. Total calcium levels may only be slightly decreased, even though ionized calcium levels are markedly decreased.



Reference range is 4.5 - 5.3 mg/dL. Critical values are < 3.5 mg/dL and >6.5 mg/dL.

Specimen requirement is one SST tube of blood. Tourniquet time should not exceed one minute. The tube must remained capped and should be transported in wet ice. Hemolysis will falsely lower ionized calcium values.