AbraCalc

Corrected Calcium: Calcium 11.0, Albumin 2.0 g/dL

With a measured calcium of 11.0 mg/dL and albumin of 2.0 g/dL, the corrected calcium is approximately 13.0 mg/dL, indicating significant hypercalcemia.

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How to use this tool

  1. Enter measured serum calcium and serum albumin in the fields above.
  2. Results update instantly as you type — or click Calculate.
  3. Read your corrected calcium and the full breakdown beneath it.

A calcium of 11.0 with low albumin of 2.0 corrects to about 13.0 mg/dL, indicating clinically significant hypercalcemia.

Frequently asked questions

When do I need a corrected calcium?
Whenever serum albumin is outside the normal range (roughly 3.5–5.0 g/dL). In patients with malnutrition, liver disease, or nephrotic syndrome albumin is often low, making total calcium misleadingly low.
What is the normal serum calcium range?
Most labs use 8.5–10.2 mg/dL (2.12–2.55 mmol/L) as the adult normal range, though ranges vary slightly between laboratories.
Is this formula always accurate?
The Payne/correction formula has known limitations and can over- or under-correct. Ionised calcium measurement avoids the need for correction entirely and is preferred when accuracy is critical.