Dog · Canis lupus familiaris · typical adult weight 2.00–80.00 kg
Calcium Chloride Injectable is used in dog for Acute symptomatic hypocalcemia, hyperkalemic cardiotoxicity. Routes documented in dog: IV. A typical adult dog weighs 2.00–80.00 kg. ExoticRx lists 1 cited dose rule for Calcium Chloride Injectable in dog, drawn from published veterinary references. Verify against current literature before clinical use.
Trade names: CaCl2
| Route | Dose | Frequency | Duration | Indication | Evidence | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IV | 5–15 mg/kg | Slow IV over 10-20 min; may repeat | Emergency use; follow with CRI if needed | Acute symptomatic hypocalcemia, hyperkalemic cardiotoxicity | Strong | Plumb's Veterinary Drug Handbook, 9th Ed |
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Provides ionized calcium for cardiac contractility, neuromuscular function, and coagulation. Three times more elemental calcium than calcium gluconate.
Severe tissue necrosis if extravasated — central line preferred. Bradycardia and cardiac arrest risk with rapid infusion. Incompatible with bicarbonate.
Species-specific contraindications and adverse-reaction reports for dog may differ from canine / feline reference data — consult the primary citations listed with each rule.
Why a species-specific page? Calcium Chloride Injectable pharmacokinetics differ across species: dose ranges, intervals, and route preferences are not interchangeable. Cross-extrapolation from canine doses is unsafe in dog — the rules above are the citations specific to this species, not generic recommendations.
Sourced from published veterinary references; awaiting credentialed clinical reviewer. See our editorial process. Reference only — not veterinary advice.