| Literature DB >> 23618347 |
Thomas Westermaier1, Christian Stetter, Ekkehard Kunze, Nadine Willner, Furat Raslan, Giles H Vince, Ralf-Ingo Ernestus.
Abstract
This article reviews experimental and clinical data on the use of magnesium as a neuroprotective agent in various conditions of cerebral ischemia. Whereas magnesium has shown neuroprotective properties in animal models of global and focal cerebral ischemia, this effect could not be reproduced in a large human stroke trial. These conflicting results may be explained by the timing of treatment. While treatment can be started before or early after ischemia in experimental studies, there is an inevitable delay of treatment in human stroke. Magnesium administration to women at risk for preterm birth has been investigated in several randomized controlled trials and was found to reduce the risk of neurological deficits for the premature infant. Postnatal administration of magnesium to babies after perinatal asphyxia has been studied in a number of controlled clinical trials. The results are promising but the trials have, so far, been underpowered. In aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), cerebral ischemia arises with the onset of delayed cerebral vasospasm several days after aneurysm rupture. Similar to perinatal asphyxia in impending preterm delivery, treatment can be started prior to ischemia. The results of clinical trials are conflicting. Several clinical trials did not show an additive effect of magnesium with nimodipine, another calcium antagonist which is routinely administered to SAH patients in many centers. Other trials found a protective effect after magnesium therapy. Thus, it may still be a promising substance in the treatment of secondary cerebral ischemia after aneurysmal SAH. Future prospects of magnesium therapy are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23618347 PMCID: PMC3642016 DOI: 10.1186/2040-7378-5-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Transl Stroke Med ISSN: 2040-7378
Figure 1Serum concentrations of magnesium and calcium. After the start of intravenous magnesium administration, a significant decrease of the serum calcium concentration is observed.
Figure 2Even after prolonged intravenous magnesium administration, CSF concentrations remain distinctly lower than serum concentrations indicating a saturation of active transport via the blood brain barrier and blood-CSF-barrier.
Clinical studies assessing the effects of intravenous magnesium in ischemic stroke
| Wester et al., 1984 [ | Tolerability study | MgSO4 (15 mmol + 96 mmol/24h for 5 days) | 14 patients with ischemic stroke | Magnesium-treatment well tolerated. No information about outcome |
| Muir et al., 1995 [ | Randomized, placebo-controlled | MgSO4 (8 mmol + 65 mmol/kg for 24 hours) vs. placebo | 60 patients with ischemic stroke | Magnesium-treatment well tolerated, tendency to better neurological outcome |
| Muir et al., 1998 [ | Randomized, placebo-controlled | MgSO4 (8, 12 or 16 mmol + 65 mmol/kg for 24 hours) vs. placebo | 25 patients with ischemic stroke | All dose-regimens well tolerated. No difference in outcome |
| The IMAGES investigators, 2004 [ | Randomized, placebo-controlled | MgSO4 (16 mmol + 65 mmol/kg for 24 hours) vs. placebo | 2589 patients with ischemic stroke | No over all reduction of death or disability (primary end-point), trend to benefit in lacunar stroke |
After promising experimental data and a trend to better outcome, a large multicenter clinical trial failed to demonstrate a beneficial effect of intravenous magnesium in the over all study population. Solely the subgroup with lacunar infarction showed a tendency to better recovery after magnesium medication.
Randomized clinical studies investigating the therapeutic effect of intravenous magnesium to prevent delayed vasospasm and secondary ischemic events and to improve outcome after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage
| Luo et al., 1996 [ | Randomized, patient-blinded | MgSO4 (approx. 100 – 200 mmol per day for 2 – 3 weeks) vs. placebo | 52 patients | Significant reduction of secondary neurological deterioration, reduction of delayed cerebral infarction |
| Veyna et al., 2002 [ | Randomized, patient-blinded | Nimodipine vs. nimodipine + MgSO4 (25 mmol + 192 mmol/day for 10 days) | 36 patients | Safe use of magnesium. Non-significant trend to improved clinical outcome |
| Van den Bergh et al., 2005 [ | Randomized, double-blinded | Nimodipine vs. nimodipine + MgSO4 (64 mmol/day for 14 days) | 283 patients | Reduction of delayed cerebral ischemia and trend to better neurological outcome |
| Schmid-Elsaesser et al., 2007 [ | Randomized, double-blinded | Nimodipine vs. MgSO4 (10mg/kg + 30mg/kg/day for 7 days) | 104 patients | No significant difference between magnesium and nimodipine |
| Muroi et al., 2008 [ | Randomized, patient-blinded | Nimodipine vs. nimodipine + MgSO4 (16 mmol + 64 mmol/24h, maximum serum concentration 2.0 mmil/l) | 58 patients | Trend to better clinical outcome after 3 and 12 months. Treatment was stopped in 16 patients due to hypotension, arrhythmias, respiratory arrest and myocardial infarction |
| Wong et al., 2010 [ | Randomized, double blinded | Nimodipine vs. nimodipine + MgSO4 (20 mmol + 80 mmol/day for 14 days) | 327 patients | No reduction of secondary ischemia or outcome |
| Westermaier et al., 2010 [ | Randomized, double-blinded | MgSO4 (141 ± 51 mmol – target serum level 2.0 – 2.5 mmol/l) vs. placebo | 107 patients | Significant reduction of secondary infarction and ultrasonographic/angiographic vasospasm. Non-significant reduction of neurological outcome and mortality |
| Mees et al., 2012 [ | Randomized, double-blinded | Nimodipine vs. nimodipine + MgSO4 (64 mmol/day) | 1207 patients | No improvement of clinical outcome |
The results are not unequivocal. The beneficial effect might depend on the dose-regimen and comedication.
Randomized clinical studies investigating the neuroprotective effect of magnesium administered before delivery to women at risk for preterm birth (a) and administerd to children born at term after perinatal asphyxia (b)
| | | | | |
| Schendel et al., 1996 [ | Observational | Preterm administration for tocolysis. Dose variable, observational study | 1097 births with very low birth-weight | Reduced risk for cerebral palsy and mental retardation |
| Crowther et al., 2003 [ | Randomized | Preterm administration of 16 mmol MgSO4 followed by 4 mmol/h for 24 hours to mother vs. placebo | 1062 women in gest. week 30 or less with birth planned within 24 hours | Lower rate of pediatric mortality and cerebral palsy in the treatment group |
| Marret et al., 2007 [ | Randomized | Preterm administration of 16 mmol MgSO4 (4 g) single-dose over 30 minutes | 573 women in gest. week 33 or less with birth planned within 24 hours | Non-significant reduction of infant mortality and white matter injury |
| Magpie Trial Follow-Up Collaborative Group, 2007 [ | Randomized | Preterm administration of 16 mmol MgSO4 followed by 4 mmol/h for 24 hours to mother vs. placebo | 3283 children born before gest. week 37 | Non-significant reduction of disability after 18 months |
| Rouse et al., 2008 [ | Randomized | Preterm administration of 24 mmol MgSO4, followed by 8 mmol/h | 2241 women in gest. week 24 – 32 with birth anticipated within 24 hours | Significant reduction of cerebral palsy |
| | | | | |
| Levene et al., 1995 [ | open | MgSO4 400 mg/kg vs. 250 mg/kg | 15 full-term neonates with asphyxia | 400 mg/kg: Serum level 3,6 mmol/l, profound hypotension and respiratory depression |
| 250 mg/kg: Serum level 2.42 mmol/kg, no effect on herat rate, blood pressure and respiration | ||||
| Groenendaal et al., 2002 [ | Randomized | MgSO4 (250 mg/kg 30 min after birth and 125 mg/kg after 24 and 48 hours vs. placebo | 22 full-term neonates with asphyxia | No effect on pathological EEG patterns |
| Ichiba et al., 2002 [ | Randomized | MgSO4 (3 × 250 mg/kg in 24-hour intervals) vs. placebo | 34 full-term neonates with asphyxia | Less pathological CT- and abnormal EEG-findings. Higher rate of oral feeding and good short-term outcome ( at 14 days of age) in magnesium-treated children |
| Gathwala et al., 2006 [ | Randomized | MgSO4 (250 mg/kg 30 min after birth and 125 mg/kg after 24 and 48 hours vs. placebo | 40 full-term neonates with asphyxia | Safe use of magnesium. No change in heart-rate, respiratory rate of blood pressure |
| Bhat et al., 2009 [ | Randomized | MgSO4 (3 × 250 mg/kg in 24-hour intervals) vs. placebo | 40 full-term neonates with asphyxia | Less neurological abnormalities and pathological CT findings |
| Gethwala et al., 2010 [ | Randomized | MgSO4 (250 mg/kg 30 min after birth and 125 mg/kg after 24 and 48 hours vs. placebo | 40 full-term neonates with asphyxia | Less EEG- and CT abnormalities and better short-term outcome in magnesium-treated children |