HYPOCALCEMIA 

1. DEFINITION

Hypocalcemia = reduction in biologically active calcium.

Normal Ranges

Parameter

Normal

Total serum calcium

8.5–10.5 mg/dL

Ionized calcium

1.12–1.32 mmol/L (4.5–5.3 mg/dL)

Albumin

3.5–5 g/dL

Ionized calcium (iCa) is the physiologically active form and is preferred in ICU.

2. CALCIUM PHYSIOLOGY

Distribution

  • 99% bone
  • 1% extracellular
    • 45% ionized
    • 40% albumin-bound
    • 15% complexed (phosphate, citrate)

Key Regulators

Hormone

Action

PTH

Ca reabsorption (kidney), bone resorption, 1α-hydroxylase

Vitamin D (1,25-OH₂D)

gut Ca & phosphate absorption

Calcitonin

Minor role ( osteoclasts)

Magnesium

Required for PTH secretion + action

3. TYPES OF HYPOCALCEMIA

A. By Severity (Total Ca)

Severity

Ca level

Mild

7.5–8.5 mg/dL

Moderate

7.0–7.5 mg/dL

Severe

<7.0 mg/dL OR symptomatic

B. True vs Pseudohypocalcemia

  • True ionized Ca
  • Pseudo low albumin, normal iCa

4. CORRECTED CALCIUM (EXAM FAVORITE)

Formula

Corrected Ca=Measured Ca+0.8×(4−albumin)

BUT:
📌 ICU always trust ionized calcium

5. ETIOLOGY 

A. PTH (Hypoparathyroidism)

Causes

  • Post-thyroid/parathyroid surgery (most common in India)
  • Autoimmune hypoparathyroidism
  • DiGeorge syndrome
  • Infiltration (hemochromatosis, Wilson)
  • Radiation

Labs

  • Ca
  • phosphate
  • PTH
  • Normal Mg

B. PTH Resistance (Pseudohypoparathyroidism)

  • Normal or PTH
  • Target organ resistance

Albright hereditary osteodystrophy

  • Short 4th metacarpal
  • Short stature
  • Obesity
  • Intellectual disability

C. Vitamin D Deficiency / Resistance

Causes

  • Nutritional deficiency
  • Malabsorption
  • CKD
  • Liver disease
  • Anticonvulsants
  • Vitamin D–dependent rickets

Labs

  • Ca
  • phosphate
  • PTH
  • 25-OH vitamin D

D. Magnesium Disorders 

Mg State

Effect

Mg

PTH secretion + resistance

Mg

Suppresses PTH

Hypocalcemia refractory to calcium CHECK MAGNESIUM

E. Critical Illness–Related Hypocalcemia (ICU relevant)

Cause

Mechanism

Sepsis

Cytokine-mediated PTH resistance

Massive transfusion

Citrate chelation

Acute pancreatitis

Fat saponification

Rhabdomyolysis

Ca deposition in muscle

Tumor lysis syndrome

Hyperphosphatemia

AKI/CKD

Vit D, phosphate

Burns

Ca sequestration

F. Drug-Induced

  • Bisphosphonates
  • Denosumab
  • Cisplatin
  • Foscarnet
  • Loop diuretics
  • Phenytoin
  • PPIs (chronic)

6. CLINICAL FEATURES 

Neuromuscular

  • Perioral numbness
  • Paresthesias
  • Muscle cramps
  • Tetany
  • Laryngospasm
  • Seizures

Cardiovascular

  • Prolonged QT
  • Arrhythmias
  • Hypotension
  • myocardial contractility

Signs

  • Chvostek sign
  • Trousseau sign

7. ECG CHANGES (VERY HIGH-YIELD)

Finding

Mechanism

Prolonged QT

Prolonged ST

Torsades de pointes

Severe cases

8. DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH (STEP-WISE)

Step 1: Confirm

  • Total Ca
  • Ionized Ca

Step 2: Key Labs

Test

Purpose

PTH

Etiology

Mg

Refractory causes

Phosphate

Differentiation

25-OH Vit D

Deficiency

Creatinine

CKD

Step 3: Pattern Recognition

Ca

PTH

Phosphate

Diagnosis

Hypoparathyroidism

Vit D deficiency

CKD

N/

N

Critical illness

9. MANAGEMENT 

A. WHEN TO TREAT

Treat immediately if:

  • Symptomatic
  • Ca <7 mg/dL
  • Ionized Ca <0.9 mmol/L
  • Seizures, arrhythmia, laryngospasm

B. ACUTE SEVERE HYPOCALCEMIA (ICU PROTOCOL)

1️⃣ IV CALCIUM

Preparation

Elemental Ca

Calcium gluconate 10%

9 mg/mL

Calcium chloride 10%

27 mg/mL (central line only)

📌 Cardiac monitoring mandatory

C. CHRONIC / MILD HYPOCALCEMIA

Oral Calcium

  • Calcium carbonate / citrate

Vitamin D

Condition

Therapy

Deficiency

Cholecalciferol

CKD / hypoparathyroid

Calcitriol

1️⃣ VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY

Cholecalciferol (Vitamin D)

📌 Requires functional kidneys for activation

📌 Not sufficient alone in hypoparathyroidism or advanced CKD

2️⃣ CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE (CKD)

Calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D)

Indications

  • CKD stage 4–5
  • Hypocalcemia with 1α-hydroxylase activity
  • Secondary hyperparathyroidism

📌 Monitor:

  • Calcium
  • Phosphate
  • Ca × PO product (keep <55)

D. SPECIAL SITUATIONS

Hypomagnesemia

  • MgSO₄ IV or oral first
  • Calcium alone will fail

CKD

  • Phosphate binders
  • Active vitamin D
  • Avoid hypercalcemia

Post-thyroidectomy

  • Prophylactic Ca ± calcitriol

11. COMMON EXAM TRAPS

Trap

Reality

Low Ca in hypoalbuminemia

Ionized Ca normal

Giving Ca without Mg

No response

Calcium chloride peripherally

Tissue necrosis

Treating asymptomatic ICU hypocalcemia

Not recommended

13. REFERENCES

  • Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine
  • Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guidelines
  • UpToDate: Hypocalcemia
  • NEJM reviews on electrolyte disorders
  • ICU textbooks (Oh’s, Marino)