Calcium & Phosphorous Homeostasis Flashcards
calcium - roles
*myocardial & smooth muscle contraction
*blood coagulation
*intracellular messaging
*structural
phosphate - roles
*energy production
*protein production
*skeletal/structural
calcium distribution
99% in bone
1% intracellular
0.10% extracellular
renal calcium reabsorption
1) proximal tubule: calcium reabsorption is passive, linked to sodium reabsorption
2) sodium absorbed in thick ascending loop of henle by furosemide-sensitive NKCC transporter with backleak of K+ → leads to increased paracellular calcium reabsorption
3) DCT: transcellular calcium reabsorption in the presence of PTH and calcitriol
effects of thiazide diuretics on calcium
*cause sodium-wasting distally that is compensated for by proximal sodium uptake
*leads to INCREASED CALCIUM REABSORPTION and HYPOCALCIURIA (decreased calcium excretion), and rarely hypercalcemia
effects of furosemide (loop diuretics) on calcium
*Loops LOSE calcium
*block the NKCC transporter & results in loss of electrochemical gradient
*results in DECREASED CALCIUM REABSORPTION and HYPERCALCIURIA (increased excretion of calcium); hypocalcemia
furosemide (loop diuretics) - effects on urine calcium and serum calcium
*urine calcium: INCREASED
*serum calcium: decreased
*used to be used as a treatment for hypercalcemia (i.e. lowers serum calcium)
thiazide diuretics - effects on urine calcium and serum calcium
*serum calcium: increased
*urine calcium: decreased
*may cause hypercalcemia (i.e. raises serum calcium)
phosphate distribution
86% in bone
14% intracellular
.03% extracellular
total serum calcium =
= protein-bound calcium + ionized calcium + complexed calcium
50% ionized
40% protein-bound
10% complexed
note - we are really interested in the ionized calcium
factors affecting serum calcium
*albumin binding
*other protein binding
*pH
total serum calcium vs. ionized calcium
*total serum calcium:
-part of basic metabolic panel
-inexpensive to test
-includes ionized calcium, complexed calcium, bound calcium
-low serum albumin affects total calcium but not ionized calcium
*ionized calcium:
-separate test
-collected in a different tube
-more expensive
-the “important” calcium level
corrected serum calcium =
[(4 - serum albumin) x 0.8] + serum calcium
hypocalcemia - clinical manifestations
*INCREASED neuromuscular excitability / tetany
1. Chvostek’s sign - tapping on the facial nerve results in contraction of ipsilateral facial muscles
2. tetany - diffuse involuntary muscle contractions
3. Trousseau’s sign - carpal-pedal spasm occurring with inflation of blood pressure cuff
4. PROLONGED QT interval
hypercalcemia - clinical manifestations
“stones, bones, moans, and groans”:
*nephrolithiasis
*bone pain
*lethargy/anorexia
*constipation