In medicine, hypocalcaemia is the presence of low serum calcium levels in the blood, usually taken as less than 2.1 mmol/L or 9 mg/dl or an ionized calcium level of less than 1.1 mmol/L (4.5 mg/dL). It is a type of electrolyte disturbance. In the blood, about half of all calcium is bound to proteins such as serum albumin, but it is the unbound, or ionized, calcium that the body regulates. If a person has abnormal levels of blood proteins, then the plasma calcium may be inaccurate. The ionized calcium level is considered more clinically accurate in this case.
Cause
It manifests as a symptom of a
parathyroid hormone deficiency/malfunction, a
Vitamin D deficiency, or unusually high magnesium levels
hypermagnesemia, or low magnesium levels
hypomagnesemia.
More specifically, hypocalcemia may be associated with low PTH levels as seen in hereditary hypoparathyroidism, acquired hypoparathyroidism (surgical removal MCC of hypoparathyroidism), and hypomagnesemia. Hypocalcemia may be associated with high PTH levels when the parathyroid hormone is ineffective; in chronic renal failure, the hydroxylation of vitamin D is ineffective, calcium levels in the blood fall, and high PTH levels are produced in response to the low calcium, but fail to return calcium levels to normal.
- Eating disorders
- Excessive dietary magnesium, as with supplementation.
- Prolonged use of medications/laxatives containing magnesium
- Absent parathyroid hormone (PTH)
- Ineffective PTH
- Deficient PTH
- Exposure to hydrofluoric acid
- As a complication of pancreatitis
- As a result of hyperventilation
- Alkalosis, often caused by hyperventilation
- Chelation Therapy
- Neonatal hypocalcemia
- Very low birth weight (less than 1500 grams)
- Gestational age less than 32 weeks
Symptoms
- Perioral tingling and parasthesia, 'pins and needles' sensation over the extremities of hands and feet. This is the earliest symptom of hypocalcemia.
- Tetany, carpopedal spasm are seen.
- Latent tetany
- Tendon reflexes are hyperactive
- Life threatening complications
- EKG changes
- Prolonged QTc
- Prolonged ST interval
Management
Animals
Farm animals, mainly cows, can suffer hypocalcaemia (or milk fever) after
calving. This is due to a large calcium demand and a slow response from the animal in terms of intestinal absorption or bone resorption. If a cow or other animal is affected it will collapse and have muscle spasms. It will eventually enter a coma and can die.
The treatment is an injection of calcium gluconate. It can be prevented in part by avoiding excess calcium, or more commonly, by regulating potassium in the diet before calving.
Alkalosis
As
blood plasma hydrogen ion concentration decreases, caused by respiratory or metabolic
alkalosis, freely ionized calcium concentration decreases. This freely ionized calcium is the biologically active component of blood calcium. Since a portion of both hydrogen ions and calcium are bound to serum
albumin, when blood becomes alkalotic, bound hydrogen ions
dissociate from albumin, freeing up the albumin to bind with more calcium and thereby decreasing the freely ionized portion of total serum calcium. For every 0.1 increase in pH, ionized calcium decreases by about 0.05 mmol/l. This hypocalcemia related to alkalosis is partially responsible for the cerebral
vasoconstriction that causes the
lightheadedness,
fainting, and
parasthesia often seen with
hyperventilation.
See also
External links