Calcium, Magnesium, and Phosphorus: Emergency Department Testing Yield
Open Access
- 1 June 1997
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Academic Emergency Medicine
- Vol. 4 (6) , 559-563
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1553-2712.1997.tb03578.x
Abstract
Objectives: To investigate how often the ED ordering of stat serum calcium (Ca+2), magnesium (Mg+2), and phosphorus (PO4‐3) levels affected clinical treatment; to define the diagnoses of patients for whom Ca+2, Mg+2, and PO4‐3 measurements did affect clinical therapy; and to suggest guidelines for more appropriate ordering of these laboratory tests.Methods: A retrospective chart review was performed in an academic teaching hospital. All adult ED patients who had Ca+2, Mg+2, or PO4‐3 laboratory testing during the 9‐month study period were included and evaluated for potential clinical impact of an abnormal Ca+2, Mg+2, or PO4‐3 laboratory test.Results: 1,477 patients had Ca+2, Mg+2, or PO4‐3 measured while in the ED during the study period. Of these, 260 patients (17.6%) had a total of 312 abnormal Ca+2, Mg+2, or PO4‐3 values as defined by results exceeding ±15% of normal reference values. Of these, only 5 patients (0.3%) received treatment for abnormal values in the ED, while 75 patients (5.1%) were treated once admitted to the hospital. In this study, the only diagnostic groups to whom significant treatment was administered were diabetic patients (Ca+2 and PO4‐3); alcoholic patients (Mg+2); and renal failure patients (Ca+2, Mg+2, and PO4‐3).Conclusion: These results suggest that stat Ca+2, Mg+2, and PO4‐3 levels seldom affect clinical treatment in the ED. The frequency of ordering these tests may be reduced by obtaining Ca+2, Mg+2, or PO4‐3 measurements only for patients known to be at risk for such abnormalities, based on their existing or suspected diagnoses. The authors suggest obtaining these tests, when indicated, on a “non‐stat” basis, with the subsequent laboratory results becoming available in‐hospital, where treatment is more likely to occur.Keywords
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