Serum ionized calcium in acute pancreatitis
- 1 September 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in British Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 64 (9) , 665-668
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bjs.1800640917
Abstract
Measurement of serum ionized calcium was performed daily for 7 days after admission in 8 consecutive patients with acute pancreatitis. The results support the findings of our previous study that the most common cause of the low serum calcium often found in patients with this disease is a low serum albumin; when correction of serum calcium is made for hypo-albuminaemia, most patients are found to be normocalcaemic. The occasional hypocalcaemia as shown by the ‘corrected’ serum calcium or by serum ionized calcium measurement is usually mild and transient, indicating that the normal homoeostatic mechanisms of the body can efficiently maintain the physiologically active fraction of the serum calcium within, or close to, the normal range. These findings explain the rarity of overt and subclinical tetany in acute pancreatitis. This study has shown that correction of serum calcium for albumin provides similar information to the direct measurement of serum ionized calcium. The value of ‘apparent’ hypocalcaemia in assessing severity of acute pancreatitis requires reappraisal, while greater attention should be directed towards the investigation and management of hypoalbuminaemia in this disease.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hypocalcaemia of acute pancreatitis: the effect of hypoalbuminaemiaCurrent Medical Research and Opinion, 1976
- A prospective study of acute pancreatitisBritish Journal of Surgery, 1975
- The aetiology of hypocalcaemia in acute pancreatitisBritish Journal of Surgery, 1975
- HYPONATRÆMIAThe Lancet, 1974
- HYPONATRAEMIA AND SICK CELLSBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1973
- Pancreatitis and Calcium MetabolismAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1971
- Hypocalcemia and Tetany With Steroid-Induced Acute PancreatitisArchives of Surgery, 1968
- A Disturbance in Calcium Metabolism Leading to Tetany Occurring Early in Acute PancreatitisAnnals of Surgery, 1955
- Calcium, potassium, magnesium and amylase disturbances in acute pancreatitisThe American Journal of Medicine, 1952
- RELATION OF CALCIUM AND LIPIDS TO ACUTE PANCREATIC NECROSISArchives of internal medicine (1908), 1942