Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (376 page)

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DESCRIPTION
  • Hypocalcemia is defined as a total plasma calcium level <8.7 mg/dL:
    • Ionized calcium may be normal and, therefore, have no clinical manifestations.
  • Normal total serum calcium concentrations are 8.7–10.5 mg/dL.
ETIOLOGY
  • Incidence in the general population is 0.6%.
  • Mechanism:
    • From either increased loss of calcium from the circulation or decreased entry into the circulation
    • Intravascular calcium circulates in 3 forms:
      • Bound to proteins (mainly albumin): 45–50%
      • Bound to complexing ions (citrate, phosphate, carbonate): 5–10%
      • Ionized (free) calcium (physiologically active form): 45–50%
    • Serum levels of calcium are primarily controlled by 3 hormones:
      • Parathyroid hormone (PTH)
      • Decrease in calcium levels leads to an increase in PTH secretion (increasing bone resorption, renal absorption, intestinal absorption, urinary phosphate excretion).
    • Vitamin D (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D):
      • Decrease in calcium level activates vitamin D (increasing bone resorption and intestinal absorption).
    • Calcitonin:
      • Causes a direct inhibition of bone resorption with increased calcium levels
  • Hypoalbuminemia—the most common cause:
    • Each 1 g/dL decrease in serum albumin decreases protein-bound serum calcium by 0.8 mg/dL.
    • Ionized (free) calcium levels do not change.
Pediatric Considerations
  • Children have higher values of normal calcium (9.2–11 mg/dL).
  • Neonatal hypocalcemia: Total serum calcium concentrations <7.5 mg/dL or serum-ionized calcium levels <4 mg/dL
  • Symptoms of hypocalcemia in infancy:
    • Hyperactivity, jitteriness
    • Tachypnea
    • Apneic spells with cyanosis
    • Vomiting
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Occur when ionized calcium <3.2 mg/dL
  • Dependent upon absolute calcium concentration and rate at which it falls
  • Neuromuscular:
    • Paresthesias
    • Hyperreflexia
    • Muscle spasm
    • Tetany:
      • Neuromuscular irritability
      • Uncommon unless ionized calcium <4.3 mg/dL
    • Latent tetany
    • Chvostek sign (finger taps of parotid gland over the facial nerve causes facial muscle spasm)
    • Trousseau signs (an inflated blood pressure cuff over the arm causes carpopedal spasm)
    • Laryngeal stridor
    • Seizures
    • Choreoathetosis
  • Cardiovascular:
    • Dysrhythmias:
      • Torsades de pointes
      • Heart block
    • Hypotension
    • Impaired contractility (heart failure)
    • ECG changes:
      • Bradycardia
      • QT and ST prolongation
      • T-wave abnormalities
  • Psychiatric:
    • Irritability/anxiety
    • Psychosis
    • Depression
    • Confusion
    • Delusions
    • Chorea
    • Parkinsonisms
  • Ocular:
    • Papilledema
    • Cataracts
    • May occur in patients with acute onset hypocalcemia
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Serum-ionized calcium level confirms the diagnosis

DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Arterial blood gas:
    • Change from normal pH of 0.1 U equals a reciprocal change in ionized calcium of ∼1.7 mg/dL.
  • Serum albumin
  • Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine, glucose
  • Magnesium
  • Phosphate:
    • Increase in phosphate associated with hypoparathyroidism
    • Decrease in phosphate associated with vitamin D deficiency
  • PTH:
    • Very high levels of PTH associated with pseudohypoparathyroidism
    • High levels of PTH associated with vitamin D deficiency
    • Low levels of PTH associated with hypoparathyroidism
  • Serum calcidiol or calcitriol
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

ECG:

  • Prolonged QT interval
  • Heart block
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Impaired PTH action or secretion:
    • Parathyroid or thyroid surgery or radical neck surgery and/or irradiation for head and neck cancer
    • Autoimmune disease (typically presents in childhood)
    • Congenital hypoparathyroidism
    • Neonatal secondary to maternal hyperparathyroidism
    • Pseudohypoparathyroidism (resistance to PTH)
    • Infiltrative (amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, metastases, iron overload)
    • HIV infection
  • Impaired vitamin D synthesis or action:
    • Nutritional malabsorption or poor intake
    • Renal disease
    • Pronounced hypophosphatemia
  • Sepsis or severe burns:
    • Impaired secretion of PTH and calcitriol
    • End-organ resistance to the action of PTH
  • Calcium complex formation or sequestration:
    • Hyperphosphatemia
    • Ethylene glycol, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), citrate (from transfusion)
    • Pancreatitis, rhabdomyolysis
    • Alkalosis (i.e., hyperventilation)
  • Hypomagnesemia:
    • Causes end-organ PTH resistance
    • Decreased PTH secretion
    • Seen in chronic and/or critical illness
    • Must give magnesium to correct hypocalcemia
  • Medications:
    • Mithramycin, plicamycin, phosphate, calcitonin, bisphosphonates
    • Phenobarbital, phenytoin
    • Cisplatin
    • Cadmium, colchicine
    • Fluoride, citrate, PPI
  • Malignancies:
    • Prostate cancer
    • Breast cancer
    • Lung cancer
    • Chondrosarcoma
  • “Hungry bone syndrome”:
    • After parathyroid removal
    • Rapid accretion of calcium as bone is remineralized
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY

ABCs:

  • Establish IV catheter access.
  • Cardiac monitor
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Acute management:
    • Treat symptomatic hypocalcemia as a medical emergency with parenteral calcium administration.
    • Calcium IV bolus:
      • Calcium gluconate 1–2 g in 50 mL of 5% dextrose
      • Infuse over 20 min
      • Faster IV rates can cause cardiac dysrhythmias
      • Calcium salts are irritating to veins.
      • IM calcium gluceptate or calcium gluconate if IV access not available
      • Bolus dose increases ionized calcium for only 1–2 hr, therefore, must be followed by an infusion
    • Calcium infusion:
      • Calcium infusion rate: 0.5–1.5 mg/kg/hr
      • Do not mix with bicarbonate or phosphate or precipitation of salts may form.
      • Administer cautiously in patients taking digitalis—may initiate and exacerbate digitalis toxicity
    • Response to therapy:
      • Individual responses vary.
      • Monitor calcium concentrations q1–4h during therapy.
      • Titrate treatment to symptoms or ECG changes.
      • Consider hypomagnesemia if the patient fails to respond to calcium therapy—correct hypomagnesemia with Mg 2 g IVPB 10% solution over 10 min
      • In the setting of acidosis, correct calcium 1st; alkalosis will further reduce ionized calcium.
      • Side effects of IV calcium include: Nausea, vomiting, hypotension, and dysrhythmias
  • Chronic management:
    • Oral calcium supplementation
    • 1.5–2 g/day of Calcium in div. doses. May need up to 4 g/day in patients with malabsorption.
    • Vitamin D:
      • Enhances intestinal absorption
      • Initiate with calcium supplementation—alone not sufficient to restore calcium levels.
      • 600 IU for ages 19–50 yr
      • 600 IU for ages 51–70 yr
      • 800 IU for ages 71 and older
      • Multivitamins contain variable amounts of vitamin D
    • Vitamin D preparations:
      • Ergocalciferol: 125 μg/day
      • Dihydrotachysterol: 100–400 μg/day
      • Calcifediol: 50–200 μg/day
      • Calcitriol: 0.25–0.5 μg/day: Rapid onset (preferred). Most active metabolite of vitamin D
Pregnancy Considerations

Calcitriol requirements may double or triple toward the end of pregnancy.

MEDICATION
  • IV calcium:
    • Calcium chloride: 1 g in 10 mL (1 g = 360 mg [13.6 mEq] elemental calcium)
    • Calcium gluceptate (IV/IM): 1 g in 5 mL (1 g = 90 mg [4.5 mEq] elemental calcium)
    • Calcium gluconate: 1 g in 10 mL (1 g = 90 mg [4.5 mEq] elemental calcium)
  • Oral calcium:
    • Calcium carbonate: 350–1,500 mg tablets (1 g = 400 mg)
    • Calcium citrate: 950 mg tablets (1 g = 211 mg elemental calcium)
    • Calcium glubionate: 18 g/5 mL of syrup (1 g = 65 mg elemental calcium)
    • Calcium gluconate: 500—1,000 mg tablets (1 g = 90 mg elemental calcium)
    • Calcium lactate: 350–1,000 mg tablets (1 g = 130 mg elemental calcium)
Pediatric Considerations
  • Initial calcium bolus with 10% calcium gluconate should be 9–18 mg of elemental calcium/kg or 1–2 mL/kg not to exceed 5 mL in premature infants or 10 mL in term infants.
  • Calcitriol dose in children ranges from 0.1–3 μg/day.
  • MISCELLANEOUS:
    • Calcium content of common foods:
      • Milk or yogurt, 8 oz = 300 mg
      • Cheddar cheese, 1 oz = 200 mg
      • Calcium-fortified cereal, 1 cup = 300 mg
      • Calcium-fortified orange juice, 1 cup = 270 mg
      • Shrimp, 3 oz = 50 mg
      • Peanuts = 130 mg
      • Orange = 50 mg
FOLLOW-UP
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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