Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CALCIUM CHLORIDE 10 versus POTASSIUM CHLORIDE 0 15 IN DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CALCIUM CHLORIDE 10 versus POTASSIUM CHLORIDE 0 15 IN DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
CALCIUM CHLORIDE 10% vs POTASSIUM CHLORIDE 0.15% IN DEXTROSE 5% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Calcium chloride dissociates to provide calcium ions, which are essential for myocardial contractility, nerve impulse transmission, and blood coagulation. It antagonizes the cardiotoxic effects of hyperkalemia by stabilizing cardiac cell membrane potential.
Potassium is the major intracellular cation. It is essential for the maintenance of intracellular tonicity, nerve impulse transmission, cardiac muscle contractility, and skeletal muscle contraction. Dextrose provides a source of calories and may help to correct hypoglycemia.
IV: 500 mg to 1 g (5-10 mL of 10% solution) administered slowly at a rate not exceeding 0.5-1 mL/min; may be repeated every 1-3 days based on serum calcium levels.
Intravenous infusion at a rate not exceeding 10 mEq/hour (0.75 mEq/kg/hour). Typical dose: 20-40 mEq potassium chloride in 1 liter D5W administered over 8-12 hours.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal half-life ~4-6 hours for rapid distribution phase; prolonged in renal impairment (up to 24-48 hours).
Potassium has no true elimination half-life as it is an endogenous electrolyte; redistribution half-life is approximately 1–1.5 hours for exogenous loads, reflecting cellular uptake and renal excretion. In anephric patients, half-life extends to 12–24 hours due to reliance on gastrointestinal and dialysis excretion.
Primarily renal (>80% as ionized calcium); minor fecal elimination (10-20%) via endogenous secretion; negligible biliary excretion.
Renal: >90% of potassium excreted by kidneys, with distal tubular secretion and reabsorption. Fecal: ~10% eliminated via gastrointestinal tract. Biliary: negligible.
Category C
Category C
Electrolyte Supplement
Electrolyte Supplement