Consumer medicine information

Calcium Chloride 10% Injection

Calcium chloride dihydrate

BRAND INFORMATION

Brand name

Phebra Calcium Chloride Dihydrate 10% Injection

Active ingredient

Calcium chloride dihydrate

Schedule

Unscheduled

 

Consumer medicine information (CMI) leaflet

Please read this leaflet carefully before you start using Calcium Chloride 10% Injection.

What is in this leaflet

This leaflet answers some common questions about Calcium Chloride Injection. It does not contain all the available information. It does not take the place of talking to your doctor.

All medicines have risks and benefits. Your doctor has weighed the risks of you being given Calcium Chloride Injection against the benefits they expect it will have for you.

If you have any concerns about being given this medicine, ask your doctor.

Keep this leaflet. You may need to read it again.

What Calcium Chloride 10% Injection is used for

Calcium Chloride is a calcium salt used primarily to treat or prevent calcium deficiency. It is also used to treat high levels of potassium in the blood.

This medicine works by increasing the level of calcium in the blood.

Ask your doctor if you have any questions about why Calcium Chloride Injection has been prescribed for you. Your doctor may have prescribed it for another reason.

Before you are given Calcium Chloride 10% Injection

When you must not be given it

You should not be given Calcium Chloride Injection if you are allergic to calcium chloride.

Some of the symptoms of an allergic reaction may include:

  • shortness of breath
  • wheezing or difficulty breathing
  • swelling of the face, lips, tongue or other parts of the body
  • rash, itching or hives on the skin.

You should not be given Calcium Chloride Injection if the calcium levels in your blood or urine are above normal.

You should not be given Calcium Chloride Injection if you have any of the following medical conditions:

  • a dangerously fast heart beat
  • severe kidney disease or kidney stones
  • sarcoidosis, a disease that causes tiny lumps of cells in your body.

Calcium Chloride Injection must not be given to infants by mouth, as it may severely irritate their stomach.

You should not be given Calcium Chloride Injection if the solution is discoloured, cloudy, turbid, or a precipitate or particles are present. The solution is normally a clear, colourless liquid.

You should not be given this medicine if when diluted with another solution it causes the solution to precipitate, become cloudy, turbid, discolour, or particles are visible.

Do not take this medicine after the expiry date printed on the pack or if the packaging is torn or shows signs of tampering. If you are given this medicine after the expiry date has passed it may not work as well.

If you are not sure whether you should be given this medicine, talk to your doctor.

Before you are given it

Tell your doctor if you have allergies to any other medicines, foods, preservatives or dyes.

Tell your doctor if you have or have had any of the following medical conditions:

  • low blood pressure
  • kidney disease
  • heart disease
  • kidney stones or stones of the urinary tract
  • breathing difficulties or increased rate of breathing
  • dehydration or any other chemical imbalance in the blood.

Tell your doctor if you are pregnant or planning to become pregnant or are breast-feeding. Your doctor will discuss the risks and benefits involved.

If you have not told your doctor about any of the above, tell him/her before you are given Calcium Chloride Injection.

Taking other medicines

Tell your doctor if you are taking any other medicines, including medicines that you buy without a prescription from your pharmacy, supermarket, health food shop, naturopath or herbalist.

Some medicines and Calcium Chloride Injection may interfere with each other. These include:

  • digoxin a medicine used to treat heart disease
  • verapamil a medicine used to relax the blood vessels and prevent abnormal beating of the heart
  • Other medicines containing calcium or magnesium.

These medicines may be affected by Calcium Chloride Injection, or may affect how well it works. Your doctor or pharmacist has more information on medicines to be careful with or avoid while being given this medicine.

How Calcium Chloride 10% Injection is given

Calcium Chloride Injection must only be given by a doctor or nurse.

It is usually given as a slow injection into a vein while the patient is lying down.

Your doctor will decide what dose of calcium chloride you will receive and for how long you will receive it. This depends on your medical condition and other factors, such as your weight. Sometimes only a single dose of calcium chloride is required.

If you are given too much (overdose)

Calcium Chloride Injection must only be given by a nurse or doctor so an overdose is not likely to occur.

Some medical conditions may result in too much calcium in the blood. Your doctor or nurse will monitor the level of calcium in the blood.

Symptoms of an overdose are the same as side effects but may be more severe.

The symptoms of a side effect are listed under Side Effects.

If you notice any symptoms of an overdose immediately contact your doctor or go to the Emergency Department at the nearest hospital.

For information on the management of overdose, contact the Poisons Information Centre on 13 11 26 (Australia).

While you are being given Calcium Chloride 10% Injection

Things you must do

If you are about to be started on any new medicine, remind your doctor and pharmacist that you have been given Calcium Chloride Injection.

Tell any other doctors, dentists, and pharmacists who treat you that you have been given this medicine.

If you are going to have surgery, tell the surgeon or anaesthetist that you are taking this medicine. It may affect other medicines used during surgery.

If you are about to have any blood tests, tell your doctor that you have been given this medicine. It may interfere with the results of some tests.

Keep all of your doctor’s appointments so that your progress can be checked. Your doctor may do some tests from time to time to make sure the medicine is working and to prevent unwanted side effects.

Things to be careful of

You should continue to lie down for a short time after you have been given Calcium Chloride Injection.

If you feel light-headed, dizzy or faint when getting out of bed or standing up, get up slowly. Standing up slowly, especially when you get up from chairs, will help your body get used to change in position and blood pressure. If this problem continues or gets worse, talk to your doctor.

Side effects

Tell your doctor or nurse as soon as possible if you do not feel well while you are being given Calcium Chloride Injection. This medicine may have unwanted side effects in a few people. All medicines can have side effects. Sometimes they are serious, most of the time they are not. You may need medical treatment if you get some of the side effects.

Ask your doctor to answer any of the questions you may have.

Tell your doctor or nurse if you notice any of the following and they worry you:

  • sweating, hot flushes
  • a calcium or chalky taste
  • dizziness, feeling faint
  • irregular, fast or slow heart beat
  • skin redness, pain, rash, burning or hardening of the skin at injection site.

If any of the following happen tell your doctor immediately or go to Emergency Department at your nearest hospital:

  • nausea or vomiting
  • mental disturbances
  • constipation or abdominal pain
  • muscle weakness
  • excessive thirst or urination.

The above list includes very serious side effects. You may need urgent medical attention or hospitalisation. These side effects are very rare.

Tell your doctor or nurse if you notice anything that is making you feel unwell.

Other side effects not listed above may also occur in some people.

After being given Calcium Chloride 10% Injection

You should lie down for a short time to prevent dizziness following the injection of calcium chloride.

If you feel light-headed or dizzy when getting up, get up slowly. Standing up slowly will help your body get used to the change in position and blood pressure.

If this problem continues or gets worse, talk to your doctor.

Storage

Calcium Chloride Injection will be stored in the surgery, pharmacy or ward of a hospital. The injection is kept in a cool dry place where the temperature stays below 30°C.

Calcium Chloride Injection will be opened for use on you. It will be used only once and then it will be discarded. It will never be stored after it is opened nor used for more than one person.

Product description

What it looks like

Calcium Chloride Injection is a clear, colourless solution in a 10 mL clear glass vial with a plastic top.

The vial stopper is not made with natural rubber latex.

Ingredients

Calcium Chloride Injection contains 1g of calcium chloride dihydrate in water for injections.

Calcium Chloride Injection does not contain lactose, sucrose, gluten, tartrazine, alcohol, dyes or any preservatives.

Manufacturer

Calcium Chloride 10% Injection is made in Australia by:

Phebra Pty Ltd
19 Orion Road
Lane Cove West,
NSW 2066, Australia
Telephone: 1800 720 020

Calcium Chloride Injection is distributed in New Zealand by:

AFT Pharmaceuticals Ltd
PO Box 33-203, Auckland.
Telephone: +64 9 4880232

Calcium Chloride Injection 1g of calcium chloride dihydrate in 10 mL in a 10 mL vial

AUST R 137325

Phebra product code - INJ017

This leaflet was prepared in Aug 2022.

Phebra and the Phi symbol are trademarks of Phebra Pty Ltd, 19 Orion Road, Lane Cove West, NSW 2066, Australia.

Published by MIMS October 2022

BRAND INFORMATION

Brand name

Phebra Calcium Chloride Dihydrate 10% Injection

Active ingredient

Calcium chloride dihydrate

Schedule

Unscheduled

 

1 Name of Medicine

Calcium chloride dihydrate.

2 Qualitative and Quantitative Composition

Calcium Chloride 10% Injection contains 1 g of calcium chloride dihydrate. Each 10 mL contains 6.8 mmol (13.6 mEq) calcium ions and 13.6 mmol (13.6 mEq) chloride ions.
For the full list of excipients, see Section 6.1 List of Excipients.

3 Pharmaceutical Form

Calcium Chloride 10% Injection is a clear, colourless sterile solution of calcium chloride dihydrate in Water for Injections BP with a pH of between 5 and 8.

4 Clinical Particulars

4.1 Therapeutic Indications

Parenteral administration of calcium is indicated in the treatment of hypocalcaemia where a rapid increase in plasma calcium is required, such as in hypocalcaemic tetany and tetany due to parathyroid deficiency.
Intravenous calcium is also indicated to antagonise the cardiotoxicity of hyperkalaemia.

4.2 Dose and Method of Administration

Calcium Chloride 10% Injection should not be administered if the solution is cloudy or contains particles. After use, the unused portion of each vial must be discarded. The injection should not be given via the subcutaneous or intramuscular route. Use in one patient on one occasion only and discard.
Each mL of Calcium Chloride 10% Injection contains approximately 0.68 mmol of calcium ions and 1.36 mmol of chloride ions.
To aid in converting: 1 g elemental calcium = 25 mmol elemental calcium = 50 mEq elemental calcium = 3.7 g calcium chloride.
Calcium Chloride 10% Injection must be administered slowly via a small needle into a large vein at a rate not exceeding 0.35 - 0.7 mmol (0.7 to 1.4 mEq) per minute to avoid venous damage and to prevent a high concentration of calcium reaching the heart and causing syncope. The injection should be stopped if the patient experiences pain or redness at the injection site as this may indicate extravasation of the drug.
It is recommended that the patient remain recumbent for a short time after the intravenous injection of calcium. The dose, and dose rate, should be individualised according to the patient's condition using frequent determinations of plasma calcium concentrations.

Acute hypocalcaemia.

Adults.

An initial dose of 3.5 - 7 mmol (7 to 14 mEq) calcium is recommended repeated every 1 - 3 days as necessary.

Children.

An initial dose of 0.5 - 3.5 mmol (1 to 7 mEq) calcium/kg is recommended. The dose may be repeated every 1 - 3 days as necessary.

Hypocalcaemic tetany.

Adults.

An initial dose of 2.25 - 8 mmol (4.5 to 16 mEq) calcium is recommended, repeated until a response is achieved.

Children.

An initial dose of 0.25 - 0.35 mmol calcium/kg is recommended, repeated every 6 - 8 hours until a response is achieved.

Hyperkalaemia with secondary cardiac toxicity.

Adults.

An initial dose of 1.12 - 7 mmol (2.25 to 14 mEq) calcium is recommended. The dose may be repeated after 1 - 2 minutes if necessary. ECG should be monitored during administration.

Compatibilities.

Calcium Chloride 10% Injection is reported to be compatible with glucose 5% and sodium chloride 0.9%.

4.3 Contraindications

The administration of calcium salts is contraindicated where hypercalcaemia, hypercalciuria or severe renal disease are present.
Due to the increased risk of arrhythmias, intravenous calcium administration is contraindicated in patients with ventricular fibrillation.
Administration of calcium salts is also contraindicated in patients with renal calculi, since it may exacerbate the condition, and in patients with sarcoidosis, since it may potentiate the hypercalcaemia, which may occur in this condition.
The administration of calcium preparations is also contraindicated in digitalised patients (see Section 4.5 Interactions with Other Medicines and Other Forms of Interactions).
Calcium Chloride 10% Injection should never be administered orally to infants since it may result in severe irritation to the gastrointestinal tract.

4.4 Special Warnings and Precautions for Use

Calcium gluconate and calcium chloride are presented in 10 mL vials at 10% (w/v) for injection but are not equivalent in calcium content:
10 mL of calcium gluconate 10 % solution for injection/infusion BP contains 2.2 mmol calcium;
10 mL of calcium chloride 10% solution contains 6.8 mmol of calcium.
The difference in calcium content should be accounted for to achieve the correct calcium dose when using either salt to avoid medication errors.
Solutions of calcium salts, particularly calcium chloride, are irritant and should not be administered intramuscularly or subcutaneously or into perivascular tissue, since severe necrosis or sloughing may occur. The injection should be stopped if the patient complains of discomfort. Direct injection into heart tissues should be avoided.
Intravenous calcium chloride must be administered slowly via a small needle into a large vein, at a rate not exceeding 0.35 - 0.7 mmol per minute, to avoid venous damage and to prevent a high concentration of calcium reaching the heart and causing syncope. Continuous ECG monitoring should be performed when using calcium salts to antagonise cardiac toxicity associated with hyperkalaemia.
Intravenous administration of calcium chloride may cause vasodilatation, which may result in a moderate fall in blood pressure.
Since calcium chloride is acidifying, caution should be extended in administering intravenous calcium chloride in conditions where acidification may cause problems, such as renal disease, cor pulmonale, respiratory acidosis or respiratory failure.
Caution should be extended in administering intravenous calcium solutions in conditions where there may be an increased risk of hypercalcaemia, such as chronic renal function impairment, dehydration, or electrolyte imbalance.
Since calcium salts may increase the risk of cardiac arrhythmia, caution should be extended in administering intravenous calcium preparations in patients with cardiac disease.

Use in the elderly.

No data available.

Paediatric use.

See Section 4.2 Dose and Method of Administration.

Effects on laboratory tests.

Careful monitoring of serum calcium levels is advised at frequent intervals during therapy to ensure that normal serum calcium levels are not exceeded. Urinary calcium concentrations may also need to be monitored to avoid hypercalciuria since hypercalciuria can occur in the presence of hypocalcaemia.

4.5 Interactions with Other Medicines and Other Forms of Interactions

Cardiac glycosides/ digitalis.

Since the inotropic and toxic effects of intravenous calcium chloride and cardiac glycosides are synergistic, concurrent use may increase the risk of arrhythmia.

Calcium channel blockers.

Concurrent use of calcium salts in quantities sufficient to raise the serum calcium concentrations above normal with calcium channel blocking agents may reduce the response to verapamil and probably other calcium channel blockers.

Calcium containing or magnesium containing medications.

Concurrent use with other calcium-containing or magnesium containing medications may increase the risk of hypercalcaemia or hypermagnesaemia, especially in patients with renal disease.

Neuromuscular blocking agents.

Concurrent use with parenteral calcium salts usually reverses the effects of nondepolarising neuromuscular blocking agents; also concurrent use with calcium salts has been reported to enhance or prolong the neuromuscular blocking action of tubocurarine.

Tetracyclines.

Calcium salts may complex with tetracyclines, and therefore tetracyclines and calcium salts should not be mixed for parenteral administration.

Magnesium sulfate.

Mixing calcium salts with magnesium sulfate may cause precipitation of calcium sulfate and therefore magnesium sulfate and calcium salts should not be mixed for parenteral administration.

Phosphate-containing medications.

Mixing calcium salts with phosphates may cause precipitation of calcium phosphate and therefore phosphate-containing medications and calcium salts should not be mixed for parenteral administration.

Carbonate-containing medications.

Mixing calcium salts with carbonates may cause precipitation of calcium carbonate and therefore carbonate-containing medications and calcium salts should not be mixed for parenteral administration.

Tartrate-containing medications.

Mixing calcium salts with tartrates may cause precipitation of calcium tartrate and therefore tartrate-containing medications and calcium salts should not be mixed for parenteral administration.

4.6 Fertility, Pregnancy and Lactation

Effects on fertility.

No data available.
Animal reproduction studies have not been conducted with this product. It is not known whether this product can cause fetal harm when administered to a pregnant woman or can affect reproductive capacity. Therefore, Calcium Chloride 10% Injection is not recommended during pregnancy.
Calcium is a normal constituent of breast milk, but it is not known whether calcium chloride is distributed into breast milk. Therefore, Calcium Chloride 10% Injection is not recommended during lactation.

4.7 Effects on Ability to Drive and Use Machines

The effects of this medicine on a person's ability to drive and use machines were not assessed as part of its registration.

4.8 Adverse Effects (Undesirable Effects)

Solutions of calcium salts, particularly calcium chloride, may cause venous irritation when injected intravenously. Local reactions such as skin redness or rash and pain may indicate extravasation, which can lead to severe necrosis. Tissue calcification has also been reported.
Excessive intravenous administration of calcium chloride may cause hypercalcaemia, but this is rare except in cases of chronic renal failure. Adverse reactions associated with hypercalcaemia include: thirst, nausea, vomiting, constipation, polyuria, abdominal pain, muscle weakness, mental disturbances and, in severe cases, cardiac arrhythmia and coma.
Too rapid injection of calcium chloride may cause the patient to experience hot flushes, chalky taste, peripheral vasodilation, a decrease in blood pressure and abnormal heart activity (bradycardia, arrhythmia, syncope) (see Section 4.2 Dose and Method of Administration).
If calcium chloride is injected into the myocardium, cardiac tamponade or pneumothorax, leading to ventricular fibrillation, may result.

Reporting suspected adverse effects.

Reporting suspected adverse reactions after registration of the medicinal product is important. It allows continued monitoring of the benefit-risk balance of the medicinal product. Healthcare professionals are asked to report any suspected adverse reactions at www.tga.gov.au/reporting-problems.

4.9 Overdose

Clinical features.

Hypercalcaemia may occur when large doses of calcium salts are given, especially in patients with renal failure. Symptoms associated with hypercalcaemia include thirst, nausea, vomiting, constipation, polyuria, abdominal pain, muscle weakness, mental disturbances and, in severe cases, cardiac arrhythmia and coma.

Treatment.

Plasma concentrations exceeding 2.6 mmol/L are considered hypercalcaemia. Plasma calcium concentrations should be monitored at frequent intervals to guide therapy.
For mild cases of overdose, treatment involves immediately discontinuing administration of calcium chloride, other calcium containing medications.
For more serious cases (plasma concentration > 2.9 mmol/L), the following measures may be required:
rehydration with 0.9% sodium chloride infusion;
use of non-thiazide diuretics to increase calcium excretion;
monitoring of serum potassium and magnesium levels; early use of replacement therapy;
monitoring of cardiac function; use of beta-blockers to protect the heart against arrhythmia;
haemodialysis may need to be considered.
For information on the management of overdose, contact the Poisons Information Centre on 131126 (Australia).

5 Pharmacological Properties

5.1 Pharmacodynamic Properties

Mechanism of action.

Calcium is essential for the maintenance of the functional integrity of the nervous, muscular and skeletal systems and cell membrane and capillary permeability. This cation is an important activator in many enzymatic reactions and is essential to a number of physiological processes including the transmission of nerve impulses; contraction of cardiac, smooth and skeletal muscles; renal function; respiration and blood coagulation. Calcium also plays a regulatory role in the release and storage of neurotransmitters and hormones, in the uptake and binding of amino acids, in cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12) absorption and in gastrin secretion.
The calcium of bone is in constant exchange with the calcium of plasma. Plasma calcium concentration is kept within narrow limits by an endocrine control mechanism involving parathyroid hormone, calcitonin and vitamin D. Under the influence of this control mechanism, calcium may be released from bone if plasma calcium decreases and may be sequestered into bone if plasma calcium rises. Thus, on a chronic basis, normal mineralisation of bone requires adequate amounts of total body calcium.

Clinical trials.

No data available.

5.2 Pharmacokinetic Properties

Absorption.

No data available.

Distribution.

The normal concentration range of total calcium in plasma is 2.15-2.60 mmol/L. Approximately 99% of total body calcium is contained in the bones and teeth, primarily as hydroxy apatite [Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2], with small amounts of calcium carbonate and amorphous calcium phosphates. The remaining 1% is contained in other body tissues and fluids.
Approximately 50% of calcium in plasma is in the physiologically active, ionised form, 45% is bound to protein (principally albumin) and 5% is complexed with phosphates, citrates and other anions. For a change in serum albumin of 1 g/dL, the calcium concentration may change about 0.02 mmol/dL. Hyperproteinaemia is associated with increased total serum concentration of calcium; in hypoproteinaemia, total serum calcium concentration decrease. Acidosis results in increased concentration of ionic calcium, while alkalosis promotes a decrease in the ionic serum calcium concentration.

Metabolism.

No data available.

Excretion.

Approximately 80% of calcium is excreted via faeces and consists of non-absorbed calcium and calcium secreted via bile and pancreatic juice into the lumen of the gastrointestinal tract. The remaining 20% of calcium is excreted renally. More than 95% of the calcium filtered by the renal glomeruli is reabsorbed in the ascending limb of the loop of Henle and the proximal and distal tubules. Urinary excretion of calcium is decreased by parathyroid hormone, thiazide diuretics and vitamin D and increased by calcitonin, other diuretics and growth hormone.

5.3 Preclinical Safety Data

Genotoxicity.

No data available.

Carcinogenicity.

No data available.

6 Pharmaceutical Particulars

6.1 List of Excipients

Calcium Chloride 10% Injection contains calcium chloride dihydrate BP 1 g in Water for Injections BP to 10 mL. Sodium hydroxide and/or hydrochloric acid may be used for pH adjustment. The product contains no antimicrobial preservative.

6.2 Incompatibilities

Incompatibilities were either not assessed or not identified as part of the registration of this medicine.

6.3 Shelf Life

In Australia, information on the shelf life can be found on the public summary of the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG)1. The expiry date can be found on the packaging.
1 AUST R 137325.

6.4 Special Precautions for Storage

Store below 30°C.

6.5 Nature and Contents of Container

It is presented in a 10 mL glass vial in a pack of 10 vials.
The vial stopper is not made with natural rubber latex.

6.6 Special Precautions for Disposal

In Australia, any unused medicine or waste material should be disposed of by taking to your local pharmacy.

6.7 Physicochemical Properties

Chemical structure.

Name: calcium chloride dihydrate.
Molecular formula: CaCl2.2H2O.
Molecular weight: 147.01.

CAS number.

10035-04-8.

7 Medicine Schedule (Poisons Standard)

Unscheduled in Australia.
General Sales Classification in New Zealand.

Summary Table of Changes