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Apex Nursing

Reference — Electrolytes

Calcium Regulation Reference

Three hormones, three organs, one number. Once you know that PTH and vitamin D raise calcium and calcitonin lowers it— and that calcium and phosphate move in opposite directions — every calcium and parathyroid disorder becomes predictable.

Educational use only. This is a conceptual reference for interpreting calcium values; ranges and treatment are provider- and facility-specific. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Three Regulators

HormoneEffect on CaHow
Parathyroid hormone (PTH)RAISES calciumPulls Ca from bone, reabsorbs Ca (and wastes phosphate) in kidney, activates vitamin D
Vitamin D (calcitriol)RAISES calciumIncreases Ca AND phosphate absorption from the gut; activated by PTH and the kidney
CalcitoninLOWERS calciumFrom the thyroid C-cells; deposits Ca into bone, lowers serum Ca (minor everyday role)

The Calcium-Phosphate Inverse

Calcium and phosphate have a reciprocal (seesaw) relationship: when one rises, the other falls. PTH raises calcium and wastes phosphate in the urine, reinforcing the seesaw. Clinically: hyperparathyroidism → high Ca, low phosphate; CKD → high phosphate, low Ca (driving secondary hyperparathyroidism).

Ionized vs Total & the Albumin Correction

About half of serum calcium is bound to albumin; the rest is the active ionized (free) calcium. A standard lab reports total calcium, so a low albumin makes total calcium look low even when the active ionized level is normal. Correct it or order an ionized calcium.

A common bedside correction: add 0.8 mg/dL to total calcium for every 1 g/dL the albumin is below 4 g/dL. Ionized calcium is the most accurate measure and is preferred in critical illness, transfusion, and acid-base shifts (acidosis raises ionized Ca; alkalosis lowers it — which is why hyperventilation can cause tetany).

NCLEX Pearls

  • PTH and vitamin D raise calcium; calcitonin lowers it.
  • Calcium and phosphate are inversely related — high PTH raises Ca and lowers phosphate.
  • Total calcium is affected by albumin; low albumin → falsely low total Ca (active ionized may be normal).
  • Correction: +0.8 mg/dL Ca per 1 g/dL albumin below 4; or just order an ionized calcium.
  • Alkalosis lowers ionized calcium (hyperventilation → tetany); acidosis raises it.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Infusion Nurses Society (INS) Standards of Practice · Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) · Standard laboratory reference ranges. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →