J Korean Pediatr Soc.  1993 Feb;36(2):223-231.

Childhood infection-associated hypocalcemia

Abstract

The causes of hypocalcemia in patients suffering from severe infection including sepsis are largely uncertain. So we measured serum albumin, total protein, cholesterol, PTH, and calcitonin of the infection-associated hypocalcemic children and compared with those of normocalcemic children suffering from tsutsugamushi disease. All had normal renal functions and had been admitted to the department of pediatrics of Gyeongsang National University Hospital. Hypocalcemic patients were hypoalbuminemic. Serum total calcium was inappropriately more decreased compared to the decreased amount of serum albumin in the hypocalcemic group. We also observed more frequent incidence of hypocholesterolemia (<100mg/dL) in this group. And serum PTH was appropriately elevated in the hypocalcemic patients. Serum calcitonin was elevated in both groups, but 6 times higher in the hypocalcemic group than in the normocalcemic one. Serum total calcium was positively correlated with serum albumin and negatively correlated with serum PTH and calcitonin.

Keyword

Infection; Hypochalcemia; Hypoalbuminemia; Hypocholesterolemia; Hypercalcitoninemia

MeSH Terms

Calcitonin
Calcium
Child
Cholesterol
Humans
Hypoalbuminemia
Hypocalcemia*
Incidence
Pediatrics
Scrub Typhus
Sepsis
Serum Albumin
Calcitonin
Calcium
Cholesterol
Serum Albumin
Full Text Links
  • KJP
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr