Ali Ghorbani1, Azar Baradaran2. 1. Department of Nephrology, Golestan Hospital, Ahvaz Jundishapur University of Medical Sciences, Ahvaz, Iran. 2. Department of Clinical Pathology, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran.
Implication for health policy/practice/research/medical education:
Clinical care should focus on increasing dietary magnesium intake or magnesium supplementation to improve metabolic control and prevent dyslipidemia in diabetes individuals.Diabetes mellitus is a major public health problem thought the world and is growing in populations (1). Previously, we studied the correlation of serum lipids with serum magnesium value in diabetespatients in on 122. In this study we observed, a significant inverse association of serum magnesium level with serum cholesterol and LDL-C (2). Likewise, in the study conducted by Dasgupta et al. on one hundred and fifty, diabeticpatients, hypomagnesemia was detected in 11.33% of patients. They observed that hypomagnesaemia in diabetes was correlated with poorer glycemic control nephropathy and retinopathy (3). Ahmed Baig et al. conducted a study on 60 diabeticpatients. They found that the mean serum magnesium value was significantly low in diabeticpatients without and with complications when compared with control group. Also, they observed that serum magnesium level in cases with diabetic complications was much lower than those without complications (4). Accordingly, Kocot et al. conducted an investigation on 54 diabeticpatients. They found, low serum value of magnesium in diabetic subjects in comparison to healthy individuals. They also found, a weak negative association between plasma magnesium and total cholesterol and between serum magnesium and triglycerides in diabeticpatients (5). This result attests our previous results (1-4). More recently Mishra et al. studied 45 diabeticpatients. They found a significant negative correlation of serum magnesium with triglyceride and VLDL-C level and a positive association of magnesium with serum HDL-C too (6). The correlation of hypomagnesemia and insulin resistance in diabetespatients has been documented previously too (7-9). Similarly in the study of 219 diabetic individuals, Rasheed et al. observed, serum magnesium had significantly positive association with HDL-cholesterol, while total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol was negatively associated, albeit non-significantly, with serum magnesium (10). Moreover, an investigation on 550 diabeticpatients, showed serum magnesium had significant negative association with glomerular filtration rate (8). Therefore, clinical care should focus on increasing dietary magnesium intake or magnesium supplementation to improve metabolic control and prevent dyslipidemia in diabetes individuals (6-10).
Authors’ contributions
All authors wrote the manuscript equally.
Conflict of interests
The author declared no competing interests.
Ethical considerations
Ethical issues (including plagiarism, data fabrication, double publication) have been completely observed by the author.
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