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Peer-Reviewed Evidence
HomeDrug RegistryCompareCALCIUM GLUCONATE vs ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Comparative Pharmacology

CALCIUM GLUCONATE vs ENOXAPARIN SODIUM Comparison

Head-to-head clinical analysis & difference comparison: details on mechanism of action, dosing, half-life, interactions, and maternal-fetal safety.

Clinical EssentialsPharmacokineticsSpecial PopulationsSafety & MonitoringPregnancy & LactationClinical Insights
Differential Analysis

CALCIUM GLUCONATE vs ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Clinician-reviewed, head-to-head comparison of mechanism, dosing, pharmacokinetics, and safety profiles.

View CALCIUM GLUCONATE Monograph View ENOXAPARIN SODIUM Monograph
CALCIUM GLUCONATE
Electrolyte Supplement
Category C
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Low Molecular Weight Heparin
Category A/B
TL;DR — Key Differences
  • Drug class: CALCIUM GLUCONATE is a Electrolyte Supplement; ENOXAPARIN SODIUM is a Low Molecular Weight Heparin.
  • Half-life: CALCIUM GLUCONATE has a half-life of Rapid distribution half-life ~5-10 min; terminal half-life 3-6 hours due to redistribution and renal excretion; clinically, effect duration is short (1-2 hours) due to rapid redistribution into bone and other tissues.; ENOXAPARIN SODIUM has 4.5-7 hours after single subcutaneous dose; prolonged to 8-12 hours in renal impairment (Cr Cl <30 m L/min). Clinical context: maintains anti-Xa activity for 12 hours with once-daily dosing..
  • No direct drug-drug interaction has been documented between CALCIUM GLUCONATE and ENOXAPARIN SODIUM.
  • Pregnancy: CALCIUM GLUCONATE is rated Category C; ENOXAPARIN SODIUM is rated Category A/B.

Last clinically reviewed: July 2026 · OpiCalc Medical Review Team

Clinical Essentials

CALCIUM GLUCONATE
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Mechanism of Action
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Calcium gluconate dissociates to provide calcium ions, which are essential for nerve impulse transmission, muscle contraction, cardiac function, and blood coagulation. It acts as a mineral electrolyte replenisher.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Enoxaparin binds to antithrombin III (ATIII) via its pentasaccharide sequence, enhancing ATIII-mediated inhibition of factor Xa and, to a lesser extent, factor IIa (thrombin). It preferentially inhibits factor Xa over thrombin (anti-Xa:anti-IIa ratio ~3.6:1).

Indications
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Emergency treatment of hypocalcemia,Cardiac resuscitation (e.g., hyperkalemia, calcium channel blocker overdose, beta-blocker overdose),Treatment of hypermagnesemia,Treatment of acute symptomatic hypocalcemic tetany,Off-label: Prevention of hypocalcemia during massive blood transfusion, adjunctive treatment of lead poisoning (calcium EDTA), and treatment of fluoride poisoning

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Prophylaxis of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in abdominal or hip/knee replacement surgery,Prophylaxis of DVT in medical patients with acute illness and restricted mobility,Inpatient treatment of acute DVT with or without pulmonary embolism (PE) when administered with warfarin,Outpatient treatment of acute DVT without PE when administered with warfarin,Unstable angina and non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) when administered with aspirin,Acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) managed medically or with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)

Standard Dosing
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Intravenous: 1-2 grams (10-20 m L of 10% solution) administered slowly over 5-10 minutes. May repeat based on serum calcium levels.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

1 mg/kg subcutaneous every 12 hours or 1.5 mg/kg subcutaneous once daily

Direct Interaction
CALCIUM GLUCONATE
No Direct Interaction
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
No Direct Interaction

Pharmacokinetics

CALCIUM GLUCONATE
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Half-Life
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Rapid distribution half-life ~5-10 min; terminal half-life 3-6 hours due to redistribution and renal excretion; clinically, effect duration is short (1-2 hours) due to rapid redistribution into bone and other tissues.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

4.5-7 hours after single subcutaneous dose; prolonged to 8-12 hours in renal impairment (Cr Cl <30 m L/min). Clinical context: maintains anti-Xa activity for 12 hours with once-daily dosing.

Metabolism
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Calcium gluconate is not metabolized. It dissociates to release calcium ions, which are distributed in the body and excreted primarily via the kidneys. The gluconate moiety is metabolized via the Krebs cycle.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Enoxaparin is partially metabolized in the liver via desulfation and depolymerization by heparanase and other enzymes. It has a complex pharmacokinetic profile with dose-dependent clearance; renal excretion accounts for elimination of active fragments and the unchanged drug.

Excretion
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Primarily renal (calcium is filtered and reabsorbed); negligible biliary/fecal. >98% of body calcium is in bone; excretion is complex and homeostatically regulated.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Renal (40-60% as unchanged drug via glomerular filtration and saturable tubular reabsorption). Biliary/fecal: negligible (<10%).

Protein Binding
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Approximately 45% bound to albumin; remaining free ionized calcium is the active form.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

80% bound to antithrombin III (low affinity to other plasma proteins).

VD (L/kg)
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

0.6-1.0 L/kg (distributes into extracellular fluid and bone; increases with bone turnover).

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

0.04-0.06 L/kg (plasma volume distribution; low Vd indicates limited extravascular distribution).

Bioavailability
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

IV: 100%; IM: poor and erratic (not recommended); oral: ~20-30% (limited by absorption and binding, not used for urgent hypocalcemia).

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Subcutaneous: 90-92% (complete absorption).

Special Populations

CALCIUM GLUCONATE
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Renal Adjustments
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

No specific dose adjustment for renal impairment; however, caution in severe renal failure (GFR <30 m L/min) due to risk of hypercalcemia. Monitor serum calcium closely.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Cr Cl < 30 m L/min: reduce dose to 1 mg/kg subcutaneous once daily

Hepatic Adjustments
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

No adjustment required for hepatic impairment.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

No specific Child-Pugh based adjustment; use with caution in severe hepatic impairment due to increased bleeding risk

Pediatric Dosing
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Neonates and infants: 100-200 mg/kg/dose (1-2 m L/kg of 10% solution) IV slowly, maximum 2 g; children: 1-2 g/dose IV, maximum 2 g. Dilute to 50 mg/m L (5% solution) for IV administration.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Neonates and infants: 1.5 mg/kg subcutaneous every 12 hours; Children < 2 months: 1.5 mg/kg every 12 hours; Children ≥ 2 months: 1 mg/kg every 12 hours

Geriatric Dosing
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Start at lower end of dosing range (e.g., 1 gram IV) due to increased risk of hypercalcemia and potential underlying renal insufficiency. Monitor calcium levels and cardiac function.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Increased risk of bleeding; consider lower doses (e.g., 0.5 mg/kg every 12 hours or 1 mg/kg once daily) and monitor renal function

Safety & Monitoring

CALCIUM GLUCONATE
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Black Box Warnings
CALCIUM GLUCONATE
FDA Black Box Warning

No FDA black box warning.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
FDA Black Box Warning

Enoxaparin carries a black box warning for the risk of spinal or epidural hematomas in patients receiving neuraxial anesthesia or spinal puncture, which can result in long-term or permanent paralysis. Patients should be monitored for signs of neurological impairment, and concomitant use of drugs affecting hemostasis (e.g., NSAIDs, antiplatelet agents, other anticoagulants) increases the risk.

Warnings/Precautions
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Risk of hypercalcemia; monitor serum calcium levels closely during therapy.,Risk of cardiac arrhythmias, especially if administered too rapidly or in patients receiving digoxin.,Avoid extravasation; may cause severe tissue necrosis (treat with hyaluronidase).,Use caution in renal impairment, sarcoidosis, or history of renal calculi.,Concomitant use with thiazide diuretics may increase risk of hypercalcemia.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Spinal/epidural hematoma risk with neuraxial anesthesia,Increased bleeding risk, especially in patients with renal impairment, thrombocytopenia, or age >65,Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) risk; monitor platelet counts regularly,Use with caution in patients with severe renal impairment (Cr Cl <30 m L/min), as enoxaparin accumulates and increases bleeding risk; dose adjustment required,Not recommended in patients with mechanical heart valves, especially pregnant women, due to risk of valve thrombosis,Do not mix with other injections or infusions

Contraindications
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Hypercalcemia,Severe renal failure (relative, use with caution),Patients with ventricular fibrillation (use during cardiopulmonary resuscitation may be indicated),Digoxin toxicity (relative; may exacerbate arrhythmias, use with extreme caution)

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Active major bleeding or bleeding disorders (e.g., hemophilia, thrombocytopenic purpura),History of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) or heparin-induced thrombocytopenia and thrombosis (HITT),Hypersensitivity to enoxaparin, heparin, or pork products,Not recommended for use in patients with mechanical heart valves (especially pregnant women) due to risk of valve thrombosis,Concomitant use of other drugs that significantly increase bleeding risk (e.g., warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel) without careful monitoring and indication

Adverse Reactions
CALCIUM GLUCONATE
Data Pending
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Data Pending
Food Interactions
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Avoid high-calcium foods (dairy, fortified cereals) if hypercalcemia is a concern; oxalate-rich foods (spinach, rhubarb) may reduce absorption; do not take within 2 hours of iron or tetracycline antibiotics.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

No specific food interactions. However, foods high in vitamin K (e.g., leafy greens) may theoretically affect coagulation but are not clinically significant with enoxaparin. Avoid excessive alcohol intake due to potential bleeding risk. Maintain consistent diet if also taking warfarin.

Pregnancy & Lactation

CALCIUM GLUCONATE
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Teratogenic Risk
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

FDA Pregnancy Category C. First trimester: No well-controlled human studies; animal studies not available. Second/third trimesters: Calcium gluconate is a physiologic electrolyte; deficiency may cause fetal skeletal abnormalities, but supplementation at recommended doses is unlikely to increase risk of major malformations. High doses may cause maternal hypercalcemia; risk of fetal hypoparathyroidism, tetany, and seizures if maternal calcium acutely increased. No known teratogenicity.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Enoxaparin sodium does not cross the placenta and is not associated with teratogenicity in humans. However, there is a risk of hemorrhage during delivery. Use during pregnancy requires careful monitoring for bleeding.

Lactation Summary
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Excreted into breast milk; M/P ratio approximately 0.5. Considered compatible with breastfeeding in usual maternal doses. Monitor infant for signs of hypercalcemia if maternal doses are high.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Excretion into breast milk is minimal; M/P ratio not determined. Considered compatible with breastfeeding; no known adverse effects in nursing infants, but monitor for bleeding signs.

Pregnancy Dosing
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Pregnancy-induced physiologic changes (increased plasma volume, increased GFR, placental calcium transfer) may lower maternal calcium levels; monitor and adjust dose as needed to maintain normal serum calcium. Intravenous doses typically require similar mg/kg dosing as non-pregnant; oral dosing may require a slight increase (10-20%) to compensate for increased demands and excretion. No standardized adjustment; individualized based on serum calcium levels.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Pregnancy increases volume of distribution and clearance of enoxaparin, necessitating dose adjustment. Monitor anti-Xa levels and adjust dose to maintain target levels, typically requiring higher doses per weight in late pregnancy.

Maternal Safety Status
CALCIUM GLUCONATE
Category C
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Category A/B

Clinical Insights

CALCIUM GLUCONATE
ENOXAPARIN SODIUM
Clinical Pearls
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Administer via slow IV push (1-2 m L/min) to avoid cardiac arrest; monitor ECG during infusion; do not mix with bicarbonate or phosphate solutions; extravasation causes tissue necrosis; use with caution in digitalis toxicity.

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Enoxaparin is a low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) that preferentially inhibits factor Xa over thrombin. Monitor anti-Xa levels in patients with renal impairment (Cr Cl <30 m L/min), obesity, or pregnancy. Avoid intramuscular injections and use with caution in patients receiving neuraxial anesthesia due to risk of spinal hematoma. Protamine sulfate partially reverses enoxaparin (up to 60% of anti-Xa activity). Does not routinely require monitoring of a PTT.

Patient Counseling
CALCIUM GLUCONATE

Report any pain, redness, or swelling at injection site immediately,Avoid taking calcium supplements or antacids containing calcium without consulting your doctor,Inform about any heart conditions, especially irregular heartbeat,May cause dizziness or fainting if infused too quickly

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM

Inject subcutaneously as directed, rotating injection sites (e.g., left/right abdomen, alternating).,Do not massage the injection site after administration.,Report any signs of bleeding: unusual bruising, prolonged bleeding from cuts, blood in urine or stool, coughing up blood.,Seek immediate medical attention for symptoms of spinal hematoma after neuraxial procedure: back pain, numbness or weakness in legs, bowel/bladder dysfunction.,Inform all healthcare providers (including dentists) that you are taking enoxaparin.,Avoid NSAIDs, aspirin, or other blood thinners unless prescribed by your doctor.

Safety Verification

Known Interactions

CALCIUM GLUCONATE Risks3
Calcium gluconate + Nimodipine
moderate

"Calcium gluconate provides exogenous calcium, which can counteract the calcium channel blocking effect of nimodipine. This reduces nimodipine's ability to inhibit calcium influx into vascular smooth muscle cells, potentially decreasing its antihypertensive and vasodilatory efficacy. Clinically, coadministration may lead to reduced nimodipine effectiveness in preventing cerebral vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage."

Sodium glycerophosphate + Calcium gluconate
moderate

"Sodium glycerophosphate, an organic phosphate source, can chelate calcium ions in the gastrointestinal tract, forming insoluble calcium phosphate complexes. This reduces the absorption of orally administered calcium gluconate, leading to lower serum calcium concentrations. Clinically, this may result in diminished efficacy of calcium supplementation, potentially exacerbating hypocalcemia in susceptible patients."

Calcium gluconate + Deferiprone
moderate

"Calcium gluconate chelates deferiprone in the gastrointestinal tract, forming a non-absorbable complex that reduces deferiprone's bioavailability. This results in decreased serum concentrations and diminished therapeutic efficacy of deferiprone, potentially leading to inadequate chelation of iron in patients with iron overload. Clinically, patients may experience suboptimal reduction of serum ferritin and increased risk of iron-related organ damage."

ENOXAPARIN SODIUM Risks

No interactions on record

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Clinical Q&A

Frequently Asked Questions

Common clinical questions about CALCIUM GLUCONATE vs ENOXAPARIN SODIUM, answered by our medical review team.

1. What is the main difference between CALCIUM GLUCONATE and ENOXAPARIN SODIUM?

CALCIUM GLUCONATE is a Electrolyte Supplement that works by Calcium gluconate dissociates to provide calcium ions, which are essential for nerve impulse transmission, muscle contraction, cardiac function, and blood coagulation. It acts as a mineral electrolyte replenisher.. ENOXAPARIN SODIUM is a Low Molecular Weight Heparin that works by Enoxaparin binds to antithrombin III (ATIII) via its pentasaccharide sequence, enhancing ATIII-mediated inhibition of factor Xa and, to a lesser extent, factor IIa (thrombin). It preferentially inhibits factor Xa over thrombin (anti-Xa:anti-IIa ratio ~3.6:1).. They differ in pharmacokinetic profiles, FDA-approved indications, and side effect profiles.

2. Which is stronger: CALCIUM GLUCONATE or ENOXAPARIN SODIUM?

Potency comparisons between CALCIUM GLUCONATE and ENOXAPARIN SODIUM depend on the specific clinical indication. These are agents from distinct pharmacological classes and are not directly interchangeable by dose. A physician or clinical pharmacist should guide any therapeutic switching decisions.

3. What is the standard dosing for CALCIUM GLUCONATE vs ENOXAPARIN SODIUM?

The standard adult dose of CALCIUM GLUCONATE is: Intravenous: 1-2 grams (10-20 m L of 10% solution) administered slowly over 5-10 minutes. May repeat based on serum calcium levels.. The standard adult dose of ENOXAPARIN SODIUM is: 1 mg/kg subcutaneous every 12 hours or 1.5 mg/kg subcutaneous once daily. Dosing should always be individualized based on indication, renal and hepatic function, age, and other patient factors.

4. Can you take CALCIUM GLUCONATE and ENOXAPARIN SODIUM together?

No direct drug-drug interaction has been formally documented between CALCIUM GLUCONATE and ENOXAPARIN SODIUM in current clinical databases. However, individual patient risk factors including other medications, organ function, and comorbidities should always be evaluated by a qualified healthcare provider.

5. Are CALCIUM GLUCONATE and ENOXAPARIN SODIUM safe during pregnancy?

The maternal-fetal safety profiles differ. CALCIUM GLUCONATE is classified as Category C. FDA Pregnancy Category C. First trimester: No well-controlled human studies; animal studies not available. Second/third trimesters: Calcium gluconate is a physiologic electrolyte; . ENOXAPARIN SODIUM is classified as Category A/B. Enoxaparin sodium does not cross the placenta and is not associated with teratogenicity in humans. However, there is a risk of hemorrhage during delivery. Use during pregnancy requ. Always consult a maternal-fetal medicine specialist before taking either drug during pregnancy or lactation.