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Hypophosphatemia

Last updated: March 4, 2026

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Hypophosphatemia is defined as a serum phosphate of < 2.5 mg/dL. It is more common in patients with alcohol use disorder and in critically unwell patients, who have high phosphate demands. Particularly in mild deficiency, symptoms can be nonspecific or absent entirely. However, severe hypophosphatemia can cause serious complications such as seizures, respiratory failure, and arrhythmias. Treatment may be oral or intravenous, depending on the severity of the deficiency, and should occur in conjunction with investigation of underlying causes. Supplementation regimens are covered in electrolyte repletion.

Definitionstoggle arrow icon

  • Serum phosphate of < 2.5 mg/dL (< 0.8 mmol/L) [1]
  • Severe hypophosphatemia occurs at < 1 mg/dL (< 0.32 mmol/L) [1]

Etiologytoggle arrow icon

Mechanism Cause [2][3][4]
Increased renal excretion
Insufficient intestinal absorption
Transcellular phosphate shifts
Extreme catabolic states
Pseudohypophosphatemia

Clinical featurestoggle arrow icon

Although mild hypophosphatemia rarely causes symptoms, moderate to severe hypophosphatemia is associated with various cardiac, musculoskeletal, neurological, and hematological abnormalities. [3][4]

Treatmenttoggle arrow icon

Complicationstoggle arrow icon

We list the most important complications. The selection is not exhaustive.

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 Evidence-based content, created and peer-reviewed by clinicians. Read the disclaimer