Chloride (Cl)

Results

A chloride test measures the level of chloride in your blood or urine. Chloride is one of the most important electrolytes in the blood, along with sodium, potassium, and calcium. Chloride helps keep the amount of fluid inside and outside of your cells in balance.

Normal

Normal results may vary widely from lab to lab. Blood chloride levels are checked more often than urine chloride levels. Results are usually available in 1 to 2 days.

Chloride in blood
Adults:

98–106 mEq/L or 98–106 mmol/L

Children:

90–110 mEq/L or 90–110 mmol/L

Newborn:

96–106 mEq/L or 96–106 mmol/L

Premature baby:

95–110 mEq/L or 95–110 mmol/L

 

Chloride in urine
Adult:

110–250 mEq per 24 hours or 110–250 mmol per day

Child:

15–40 mEq/24 hours or 15–40 mmol/day

Baby:

2–10 mEq/24 hours or 2–10 mmol/day

Abnormal

High chloride levels may be caused by:

Low chloride levels may be caused by:


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Author: Sydney Youngerman-Cole, RN, BSN, RNCLast Updated: May 19, 2006
Medical Review: Martin Gabica, MD - Family Medicine
Tom Bailey, MD - Family Medicine

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Topic Contents
 Test Overview
 Why It Is Done
 How To Prepare
 How It Is Done
 How It Feels
 Risks
Arrow PointerResults
 What Affects the Test
 What To Think About
 References
 Credits