The Chloride Correction Calculator is a clinical tool used to adjust measured chloride levels when sodium levels have been corrected for abnormalities. This adjustment is critical in evaluating acid-base balance, electrolyte disorders, and conditions like dehydration, renal dysfunction, or diabetic ketoacidosis.

Definition
Corrected Chloride (Cl⁻) refers to the adjusted chloride concentration in the blood after accounting for abnormalities in sodium (Na⁺) levels. Since sodium and chloride are closely linked electrolytes, changes in sodium concentration (e.g., hypernatremia or hyponatremia) can distort the interpretation of chloride levels. Correcting chloride for sodium ensures a more accurate assessment of chloride’s role in acid-base balance.
Formula
The formula to calculate corrected chloride is:
*Used to assess chloride concentration in hypernatremia
*”Corrected Na⁺” = Measured Na⁺ (if glucose and BUN are normal)
Where:
- Measured Cl⁻: Laboratory-reported chloride level (mEq/L).
- Corrected Na⁺: Adjusted sodium level (mEq/L).
- 140: Standardized normal sodium value (mEq/L).
🧮 Chloride Correction (When Sodium is Corrected)
📐 Formula Used:
Here, 140 mEq/L is considered the normal reference sodium level.
🖊️ Enter Your Values:
Calculation Examples
Example 1
- Measured Cl⁻: 100 mEq/L
- Corrected Na⁺: 150 mEq/L
Corrected Cl⁻ = 100 x 140 / 150 = 93.3 mEq/L
Interpretation: The corrected chloride (93.3 mEq/L) is lower than measured chloride, suggesting sodium elevation diluted chloride levels.
Example 2
- Measured Cl⁻: 110 mEq/L
- Corrected Na⁺: 130 mEq/L
Corrected Cl⁻ = 110 x 140 / 130 =118.5 mEq/L
Interpretation: Corrected chloride is higher than measured, indicating true hyperchloremia masked by low sodium.
Normal Values
- Chloride (Cl⁻): 98–107 mEq/L
- Sodium (Na⁺): 135–145 mEq/L
Interpretation of Corrected Chloride
- Corrected Cl⁻ > 107 mEq/L: Hyperchloremia – Associated with metabolic acidosis, dehydration, renal tubular acidosis, or excessive saline infusion.
- Corrected Cl⁻ < 98 mEq/L: Hypochloremia – Seen in vomiting, diuretic use, or chronic respiratory acidosis.
Clinical Relevance
- Acid-Base Disorders: Corrected chloride helps differentiate between chloride-responsive (e.g., diarrhea) and non-responsive (e.g., renal acidosis) metabolic acidosis.
- Fluid Management: Guides therapy in dehydration or hypernatremia/hyponatremia.
- Critical Care: Vital for managing diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) or sepsis.
Limitations
- Assumes a linear relationship between sodium and chloride, which may not hold in all cases.
- Does not account for other ions (e.g., bicarbonate) or mixed electrolyte disorders.
- Always correlate with clinical context and additional labs (e.g., anion gap, blood pH).





