Low Blood Calcium in Dogs (Hypocalcemia): Symptoms, Causes and Treatment

Low blood calcium in dogs causes tremors, seizures, and muscle stiffness. Learn the symptoms, causes, diagnosis, and how to treat hypocalcemia safely.
Medically Reviewed by

Dr. A. Arthi (BVSc, MVSc, PhD.)
Group Medical Officer - VOSD Advance PetCare™

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What you will learn

A dog that is suddenly trembling, moving with a stiff or stilted gait, panting heavily without obvious cause, or showing facial twitching is showing signs that need veterinary attention without delay. In lactating dogs, in those recovering from certain surgeries, and in dogs with undiagnosed kidney or parathyroid conditions, low blood calcium in dogs is one of the most important causes to consider. We often see this in nursing mothers brought in after several weeks of feeding a large litter, where the calcium demands of milk production have depleted the mother’s own reserves. The presentation can escalate quickly, and early treatment makes a real difference.

What is Low Blood Calcium in Dogs?

Calcium is one of the most tightly regulated minerals in the body. It is essential for muscle contraction, nerve signal transmission, heart rhythm, blood clotting, and bone structure. The parathyroid glands, the kidneys, and vitamin D work together in a finely balanced system to keep blood calcium within a safe range at all times.

Low blood calcium in dogs, or hypocalcaemia, occurs when this balance is disrupted and blood calcium falls below the normal range. As calcium drops, the electrical stability of nerve and muscle cell membranes is compromised. Nerves become hyperexcitable, muscles contract involuntarily, and in severe cases the brain is affected. This is why the symptoms of hypocalcaemia progress from mild restlessness and twitching to seizures and cardiovascular instability if treatment is not initiated.

Why Calcium Balance is Important for Dogs

Calcium is not simply a structural component of bones. It is an active physiological messenger. Normal heart rhythm depends on calcium. Normal muscle contraction, including the diaphragm that allows breathing, requires calcium. The nerve signals that coordinate movement are calcium-dependent. Even small drops below the normal blood calcium range can produce noticeable effects, and a significant fall can be life-threatening without treatment.

Symptoms of Low Blood Calcium in Dogs

The symptoms of low blood calcium in dogs develop along a spectrum from subtle to severe. Recognising the early signs allows treatment before the more dangerous stages develop:

Early and Moderate Symptoms

  • Restlessness and pacing, appearing anxious without an obvious trigger
  • Panting or rapid breathing that is not explained by heat or exercise
  • Facial twitching or muscle tremors, particularly around the face and ears
  • Stiff or stilted gait, as if the muscles are not relaxing properly between steps
  • Hypersensitivity to sound or touch
  • Reduced appetite and general unease

Severe Symptoms Requiring Immediate Care

  • Full-body muscle tremors or tetany, where the muscles remain contracted and rigid
  • Seizures, which may involve generalised convulsions or partial seizure activity
  • Fever from the muscle activity generated by involuntary contraction
  • Cardiac arrhythmias in severe cases
  • Collapse or loss of consciousness

The transition from early signs to seizures can happen within hours in acute cases, particularly in lactating dogs or those who have had parathyroid surgery. Any lactating dog showing panting, restlessness, and muscle stiffness should be treated as a potential hypocalcaemic emergency and seen by a vet the same day.

Causes of Low Blood Calcium in Dogs

Understanding the causes of low blood calcium in dogs helps identify which animals are at highest risk and why prompt management matters.

1. Eclampsia in Lactating Dogs

This is the most common and one of the most acutely serious causes of hypocalcaemia in dogs in clinical practice in India. Eclampsia, also called puerperal tetany or milk fever, occurs when a lactating dog’s body cannot replace the calcium lost in milk fast enough to maintain normal blood levels. It most commonly occurs two to four weeks after whelping when milk production is at its peak and the pups’ demand is highest.

Small breed dogs with large litters are particularly at risk, but the condition can occur in any lactating dog. We often see cases in street dogs rescued with litters, where the mother’s nutritional baseline before pregnancy was already poor. The calcium demand of feeding multiple pups simply exceeds what an already-depleted body can maintain.

2. Hypoparathyroidism

The parathyroid glands produce parathyroid hormone, which is the primary signal for calcium release from bones and calcium retention by the kidneys. When the parathyroid glands are damaged or do not function adequately, blood calcium falls. This can occur after accidental removal or damage to the parathyroid glands during thyroid surgery, from immune-mediated destruction of the parathyroid tissue, or from idiopathic parathyroid insufficiency.

3. Chronic Kidney Disease

Advanced kidney disease impairs the kidneys’ ability to activate vitamin D, which is essential for calcium absorption from the intestine. Over time, this produces declining blood calcium levels alongside the more commonly discussed electrolyte imbalances of kidney disease.

4. Acute Pancreatitis

Severe acute pancreatitis can cause hypocalcaemia through a mechanism involving the saponification of fat by released pancreatic enzymes, which binds calcium and removes it from circulation. Low blood calcium in dogs with acute pancreatitis is associated with more severe disease and a more guarded prognosis.

5. Nutritional Deficiency or Imbalance

Dogs fed long-term unbalanced home-prepared diets that are low in calcium or that have a severely imbalanced calcium-to-phosphorus ratio may develop chronic calcium deficiency. Young growing dogs and pregnant or lactating dogs on nutritionally inadequate diets are particularly vulnerable.

6. High-Risk Situations in India

Several situations specific to the Indian context create elevated risk of low blood calcium in dogs:

  • Lactating street dogs with large litters who had poor nutritional status before and during pregnancy
  • Dogs fed predominantly rice-based home-prepared diets with minimal protein or calcium supplementation
  • Dogs rescued from neglect situations with a background of chronic malnutrition
  • Breeding dogs in households where calcium supplementation during pregnancy is not routinely provided

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Diagnosis: How Vets Identify Hypocalcaemia in Dogs

In an acutely affected dog, particularly a lactating dog with classic signs, the clinical presentation may be sufficient to initiate treatment before blood results are back. However, laboratory confirmation guides ongoing management.

  • Serum calcium measurement: Total serum calcium is the primary measurement. It is important to interpret this alongside albumin levels, as calcium is partly protein-bound. Ionised calcium measurement, where available, provides a more accurate assessment of the physiologically active calcium fraction.
  • Full biochemistry panel: Kidney function, phosphorus, albumin, and glucose are assessed alongside calcium to identify the underlying cause and any concurrent abnormalities.
  • Parathyroid hormone measurement: Where hypoparathyroidism is suspected, measuring parathyroid hormone levels confirms the diagnosis.
  • Clinical assessment: In the emergency setting, the history, clinical signs, and response to calcium administration often provide a working diagnosis that is confirmed by blood results subsequently.

Treatment of Low Blood Calcium in Dogs

Low blood calcium in dogs requires prompt veterinary treatment. This is not a condition that can be safely managed at home with calcium tablets, as the severity and the appropriate dose and form of calcium depend on the clinical picture and blood results.

1. Intravenous calcium gluconate: This is the emergency treatment for dogs with active seizures, tetany, or significant clinical signs. Calcium gluconate is given slowly intravenously under continuous heart monitoring, as too-rapid administration causes cardiac arrhythmias. The rate of infusion is adjusted based on heart rate and rhythm response. This typically produces visible improvement in the clinical signs within minutes, which is one of the most gratifying responses in veterinary emergency care.

2. Subcutaneous calcium: Once the acute crisis has been managed with IV treatment, diluted calcium gluconate may be continued under the skin to maintain calcium levels while oral treatment takes effect.

3. Oral calcium supplementation: For ongoing management after the acute phase, oral calcium carbonate or calcium gluconate is prescribed. In lactating dogs, the pups are typically weaned immediately as part of the management, as continued nursing will perpetuate the calcium depletion despite supplementation.

4. Vitamin D supplementation: Where impaired vitamin D activation is contributing to the hypocalcaemia, such as in kidney disease or hypoparathyroidism, vitamin D supplementation may be added alongside calcium. This must be managed carefully, as excess vitamin D causes hypercalcaemia.

5. Treating the underlying cause: Managing hypoparathyroidism requires lifelong calcium and vitamin D supplementation. Managing kidney disease includes dietary phosphorus restriction and appropriate renal management. Ensuring adequate diet correction for nutritional cases prevents recurrence.

Home Care and Recovery Support

After discharge from the vet following a hypocalcaemic episode:

  • Give all prescribed oral calcium supplements at the correct dose and times, with food
  • Keep the dog calm and quiet during recovery; avoid excitement or loud environments that could trigger further neuromuscular irritability
  • Wean pups promptly if lactation was the cause, following the veterinary team’s guidance on the timeline
  • Attend all follow-up appointments and blood calcium checks, as recurrence within the first few days of discharge is possible if calcium is not maintained
  • Feed a nutritionally complete and balanced diet, or a veterinarian-formulated home-prepared diet, going forward

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Prognosis: What to Expect

The prognosis for low blood calcium in dogs treated promptly is generally excellent. Most dogs respond quickly and dramatically to IV calcium and recover fully from the acute episode. The longer-term prognosis depends on the underlying cause.

For lactating dogs with eclampsia, the prognosis for the mother is very good with appropriate treatment, but there is a high risk of recurrence with subsequent litters if nutritional management is not improved. Dogs with hypoparathyroidism require lifelong management but many maintain a good quality of life with consistent treatment. Dogs with hypocalcaemia as part of advanced kidney disease have a prognosis tied to the progression of the kidney condition.

Prevention Tips for Pet Parents

Several practical measures significantly reduce the risk of low blood calcium in dogs:

  • Feed a nutritionally complete and balanced diet throughout pregnancy and lactation. The calcium requirements of a lactating dog are significantly higher than those of a non-pregnant adult, and a standard home-cooked diet without supplementation may not meet these needs.
  • Monitor lactating dogs closely for the first four weeks after whelping, which is the highest-risk period for eclampsia. Early signs of restlessness, tremors, or stiffness should prompt same-day veterinary assessment.
  • Avoid giving excessive calcium supplementation during pregnancy, as paradoxically this can suppress normal parathyroid function and increase the risk of eclampsia. Supplementation during lactation is what is recommended rather than during the pregnancy itself.
  • Include calcium and phosphorus in routine blood work for senior dogs, dogs with kidney disease, and dogs that have had thyroid surgery.
  • For rescue dogs arriving in unknown nutritional condition, include mineral levels as part of the initial health assessment rather than assuming a normal baseline.

When to See a Vet Immediately

Contact your vet or an emergency clinic without delay if your dog shows:

  • Muscle tremors, twitching, or stiffness, particularly in a lactating dog
  • Panting without obvious heat or exertion in a nursing mother
  • Any seizure activity
  • Abnormal walking or sudden inability to stand
  • Hypersensitivity to touch or sound alongside other symptoms

Frequently Asked Questions

Is low blood calcium in dogs life-threatening?

Yes, severe hypocalcaemia in dogs is a genuine medical emergency. The progression from early signs to seizures and cardiovascular instability can occur within hours, particularly in acutely affected lactating dogs. However, the condition responds remarkably well to prompt IV calcium treatment, and most dogs that receive timely care recover fully from the acute episode. The danger lies in delaying treatment while monitoring at home or attempting to manage with oral calcium supplements in a dog that is already showing active signs. Any lactating dog with tremors, stiffness, or panting, and any dog with seizures where the cause is unclear, should be seen by a vet the same day without exception.

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Can diet alone correct low blood calcium in dogs?

For very mild chronic calcium insufficiency in an otherwise healthy dog, improving the diet to ensure adequate calcium and an appropriate calcium-to-phosphorus ratio may be sufficient, implemented gradually under veterinary guidance. For any dog with clinical signs of hypocalcaemia, dietary correction alone is far too slow to address the immediate crisis. IV calcium is required to restore safe levels quickly, with oral supplementation used for maintenance after the emergency is managed. Even in milder cases, any dietary change or oral calcium supplementation should be guided by your vet, as both calcium deficiency and calcium excess cause significant harm, and the correct dose depends on blood levels rather than estimation.

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Can low blood calcium in dogs recur after treatment?

Yes. Recurrence is a real concern in certain situations, most notably in lactating dogs. After an episode of eclampsia, the risk of recurrence with the same litter or with subsequent litters is significant if the underlying nutritional and lactational factors are not addressed. Most vets advise weaning the current litter promptly after an eclampsia episode to remove the ongoing calcium demand driving the depletion. For subsequent pregnancies and litters, proactive nutritional management during lactation reduces the risk. For dogs with hypoparathyroidism, recurrence is not the right framing since the condition is permanent and requires continuous management rather than treatment of episodic events.

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Is low blood calcium the same as calcium deficiency from poor diet?

They are related but not identical. Dietary calcium deficiency refers to insufficient calcium intake in the food, which over time leads to calcium being drawn from the bones to maintain blood calcium levels, eventually weakening the skeletal structure. Blood calcium may remain normal for an extended period because of this bone mobilisation mechanism. Hypocalcaemia is specifically a condition where blood calcium has fallen below the normal range, producing immediate physiological effects on nerves and muscles. Dietary deficiency can cause hypocalcaemia, but so can conditions completely unrelated to diet, such as hypoparathyroidism or eclampsia in a dog on an otherwise adequate diet. This is why a thorough investigation, including blood work and identification of the underlying cause, is important rather than assuming that supplementing calcium will resolve the issue.

If you seek a second opinion or lack the primary diagnosis facilities at your location, you can connect with your vet or consult a VOSD specialist at the nearest location or with VOSD CouldVet™ online.

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