Off the rails: hypo- vs hypercalcemia
Because calcium sets the excitability of nerve and muscle membranes, straying outside its narrow range is dangerous. Hypocalcemia (too low) makes membranes hyper-excitable β it lowers the firing threshold toward the resting potential β causing tetany, muscle spasms, and seizures (often from hypoparathyroidism or vitamin D deficiency). Hypercalcemia (too high, usually hyperparathyroidism or malignancy) gives the classic "stones, bones, groans, and psychiatric moans." The body would rather rob your skeleton than let blood calcium drift.
