Cooper D J, Walley K R, Dodek P M, Rosenberg F, Russell J A
Program of Critical Care Medicine, St. Paul's Hospital, Vancouver BC, Canada.
Intensive Care Med. 1992;18(5):286-9. doi: 10.1007/BF01706475.
Plasma ionized calcium [Ca++] concentrations are decreased in patients having lactic acidosis. To further investigate this observation, we prospectively studied nine critically ill patients who had lactic acidosis and measured arterial pH, PCO2, [Ca++], lactate, and albumin concentrations. We found a strong association between decreased [Ca++] and increased plasma lactate concentrations (r2 = 0.78, p less than or equal to 0.001). This unexpected association--[Ca++] usually increases with increasing acidosis--might be clinically important and the mechanism deserves further investigation.