- Disorders of calcium metabolism
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Disorders of calcium metabolism Classification and external resources
CalciumICD-10 E83.5 ICD-9 275.4 MeSH D002128 Disorders of calcium metabolism occur when the body has too little or too much calcium. The serum level of calcium is closely regulated within a fairly limited range in the human body.
The amount of biologically active calcium varies with the level of serum albumin, a protein to which calcium is bound, and therefore levels of ionized calcium are better measures than a total calcium; however, one can correct a total calcium if the albumin level is known.
- A normal ionized calcium is 1.12-1.45 mmol/L (4.54-5.61 mg/dL).
- A normal total calcium is 2.2-2.6 mmol/L (9-10.5 mg/dl).
- Total calcium of less than 8.0 mg/dL is hypocalcaemia, with levels below 1.59 mmol/L (6 mg/dL) generally fatal.
- Total calcium of more than 10.6 mg/dL is hypercalcaemia, with levels over 3.753 mmol/L (15.12 mg/dL) generally fatal.
See also
Inborn error of metal metabolism (E83, 275) Transition metal high: Primary iron overload disorder: Hemochromatosis/HFE1 · Juvenile/HFE2 · HFE3 · African iron overload/HFE4 · Aceruloplasminemia · Atransferrinemia · Hemosiderosisdeficiency: Iron deficiencyCuZnhigh: Zinc toxicitydeficiency: Acrodermatitis enteropathicaElectrolyte see Template:Water-electrolyte imbalance and acid-base imbalancehigh: Hyperphosphatemiahigh: Hypermagnesemiadeficiency: HypomagnesemiaCa2+high: Hypercalcaemia · Milk-alkali syndrome (Burnett's) · Calcinosis (Calciphylaxis, Calcinosis cutis) · Calcification (Metastatic calcification, Dystrophic calcification) · Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemiaM: NUT
cof, enz, met
noco, nuvi, sysi/epon, met
drug(A8/11/12)
Categories:- Inborn errors of metal metabolism
- Calcium
- Disease stubs
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