Calcium correction in hypoalbuminemia and hyperalbuminemia

Corrected calcium ยท Albumin adjustment (MD tool)

Calcium correction
for hypoโ€‘ & hyperalbuminemia

๐Ÿ”ฌ Why adjust? About 40% of serum calcium is bound to albumin. When albumin is abnormal, total calcium no longer reflects the physiologically active (ionized) calcium. Hypoalbuminemia โ†’ total calcium appears falsely low. Hyperalbuminemia โ†’ total calcium appears falsely high.

๐Ÿ“ Standard formula (adults):
Corrected Ca (mg/dL) = Total Ca (mg/dL) + 0.8 ร— (4.0 โ€“ Albumin (g/dL))
โœฆ For every 1 g/dL drop below 4.0, add 0.8 mg/dL. โœฆ If albumin > 4.0, the correction subtracts a small amount (downward adjustment).
โš•๏ธ Use this calculator to estimate true calcium status. Always interpret with clinical context.

Adjusted calcium calculator

โ€” mg/dL
Enter values and press calculate
โ“˜ Formula: Cacorr = Catotal + 0.8 ร— (4.0 โ€“ albumin)
Reference range (corrected): 8.5 โ€“ 10.2 mg/dL (adult)
For health professionals ยท Uses Payneโ€™s formula ยท Adjusts for both low and high albumin.

Most calcium in blood is either:

  • Ionized (free) calcium โ€” the biologically active form, tightly regulated and responsible for symptoms/signs of hypo/hypercalcemia.
  • Protein-bound calcium โ€” mainly bound to albumin (and to a lesser extent globulins).
  • Complexed calcium โ€” bound to anions (e.g., phosphate, citrate).

Routine labs often report total calcium (tCa). When albumin is abnormal, total calcium can look โ€œlowโ€ or โ€œhighโ€ even if ionized calcium is normal, because the bound fraction shifts with albumin.

Hypoalbuminemia (low albumin)

  • With low albumin, there are fewer binding sites, so protein-bound calcium decreases.
  • Total calcium may appear low, even when ionized calcium is normal.
  • A โ€œcorrected calciumโ€ equation estimates what total calcium might be if albumin were normal.

Hyperalbuminemia (high albumin)

  • With high albumin, more calcium is bound.
  • Total calcium may appear high, even when ionized calcium is normal.
  • Correction equations also adjust downward in this situation.

Common correction formulas (clinical practice)

There are different formulas by region/lab. Two widely used versions are:

If calcium is in mg/dL and albumin in g/dL:

  • Corrected Ca (mg/dL) = Measured total Ca + 0.8 ร— (4.0 โˆ’ albumin)

If calcium is in mmol/L and albumin in g/L:

  • Corrected Ca (mmol/L) = Measured total Ca + 0.02 ร— (40 โˆ’ albumin)

These attempt to โ€œnormalizeโ€ albumin to 4.0 g/dL (or 40 g/L).

Important limitations (what clinicians should remember)

  • Corrected calcium is an estimate; accuracy can be poor in critical illness, CKD, acidโ€“base disorders, and with abnormal proteins (e.g., paraproteinemias).
  • Ionized calcium is preferred when the result will change management (symptoms, ICU, severe electrolyte disturbances, complex cases).
  • Always interpret calcium with the clinical picture andโ€”when relevantโ€”PTH, phosphate, magnesium, vitamin D, renal function, and medications.

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