Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • albumin (2)
  • blood (1)
  • calcium (10)
  • carbon (2)
  • female (1)
  • hydrogen ion (1)
  • lactic acid (2)
  • magnesium (3)
  • plasma (22)
  • serum (3)
  • serum albumin (2)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    The plasma ionized calcium concentration (cCa2+ ) represents the biologically active form of calcium and is the preferred method for evaluating calcium status in animals. Different pH-corrective equations have been developed for human plasma, but the validity of the equations for bovine plasma is unknown. We hypothesized that pH-corrective equations for bovine plasma would be similar to those used for human plasma; cCa2+ was dependent on the plasma concentrations of total calcium (cTCa), chloride (cCl), L-lactate (cLactate), and albumin (cAlbumin); and the in vitro and in vivo cCa2+ -pH relationships would differ. Ten healthy calves (in vitro study), 1426 critically ill calves. The in vitro plasma log10 (cCa2+ )-pH relationship was determined by CO2 tonometry of 465 plasma samples. Plasma cCl was altered by equivolume dilution of plasma with 3 electrolyte solutions of different cCl. The in vivo plasma cCa2+ -pH relationship was investigated and validated using clinicopathologic data extracted from the medical records of 950 (model development) and 476 (model validation) critically ill calves. pH-corrective equations for bovine plasma were similar to those used for human plasma. Plasma cCa2+ increased in vitro with increases in plasma cCl. Plasma cCa2+ in critically ill calves was associated with plasma cTCa, blood pH, plasma cCl, serum cMg, and cL-lactate (R2  = 0.69) but not plasma cAlbumin. Calculation of cCa2+ from cTCa in calf plasma or serum requires adjustment for at least pH and cCl when 1 or both are outside the reference range. © 2019 The Authors. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.

    Citation

    Peter Constable, Florian M Trefz, Henry Stämpfli. Effects of pH and the plasma or serum concentrations of total calcium, chloride, magnesium, l-lactate, and albumin on the plasma ionized calcium concentration in calves. Journal of veterinary internal medicine. 2019 Jul;33(4):1822-1832

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 31059164

    View Full Text