1. A comparison of corrected serum calcium levels to ionized calcium levels among critically ill surgical patients
- Author
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Christian Stevens, Jonathan M. Dort, Kahn Huynh, Matthew C. Byrnes, Stephen D. Helmer, and R. Stephen Smith
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Illness ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Calcium ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Gastroenterology ,Intensive care ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Serum Albumin ,Retrospective Studies ,Ions ,Calcium metabolism ,Hypocalcemia ,Critically ill ,business.industry ,Albumin ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Corrected Serum Calcium ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,Surgical patients - Abstract
Background Aberrations in calcium homeostasis are common in critically ill patients. The proper method to evaluate this issue in surgical patients has not been completely defined. Methods Medical records of patients admitted to a university-affiliated, tertiary-care surgical intensive care unit were retrospectively reviewed. Calcium status was evaluated by ionized levels and as a function of serum calcium levels corrected for albumin aberrations. Results Corrected serum calcium values failed to accurately classify calcium status in 38% of cases. The sensitivity and specificity of the corrected serum calcium formula to evaluate hypocalcemia were 53% and 85%, respectively. Corrected serum values underestimated the prevalence of hypocalcemia and overestimated the prevalence of normocalcemia. No factors were able to discern which patients could be evaluated by corrected serum calcium levels. Conclusions Calcium homeostasis should be evaluated by ionized calcium levels rather than as a function of serum calcium and albumin levels.
- Published
- 2005
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