| Literature DB >> 29849626 |
Abdullah M Al Alawi1,2, Sandawana William Majoni1,3,4, Henrik Falhammar1,3,5,6.
Abstract
Magnesium is the fourth most abundant cation in the body. It has several functions in the human body including its role as a cofactor for more than 300 enzymatic reactions. Several studies have shown that hypomagnesemia is a common electrolyte derangement in clinical setting especially in patients admitted to intensive care unit where it has been found to be associated with increase mortality and hospital stay. Hypomagnesemia can be caused by a wide range of inherited and acquired diseases. It can also be a side effect of several medications. Many studies have reported that reduced levels of magnesium are associated with a wide range of chronic diseases. Magnesium can play important therapeutic and preventive role in several conditions such as diabetes, osteoporosis, bronchial asthma, preeclampsia, migraine, and cardiovascular diseases. This review is aimed at comprehensively collating the current available published evidence and clinical correlates of magnesium disorders.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29849626 PMCID: PMC5926493 DOI: 10.1155/2018/9041694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-8337 Impact factor: 3.257
Figure 1Magnesium balance in the human body.
Role of vitamins and hormones in magnesium homeostasis.
| Hormone/vitamin | Role of hormones/vitamins | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D | 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 can stimulate intestinal magnesium absorption. | Mg is required for metabolism of vitamin D in the liver and the kidneys and also for its transportation in serum. |
| PTH | Helps in the reabsorption of Mg in the kidney, absorption in the gut, and release from the bone. | Hypercalcemia interferes with the role of PTH in magnesium regulation. |
| Estrogen | Enhances Mg reabsorption in the kidney and absorption in the gut by stimulating TRPM6 expression. |
Mg: magnesium; PTH: parathyroid hormone.
Role of magnesium in the human body.
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| Protein synthesis, muscle and nerve transmission, neuromuscular conduction, and blood glucose and blood pressure regulation. |
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| Facilitates active transport of calcium and potassium ions across cell membranes, which is essential for the conduction of nerve impulses, muscle contraction, maintaining vasomotor tone, and normal heart rhythm. |
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| Important for the structure of bones, proteins, many enzymes, mitochondria, DNA, and RNA. |
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| Involved in macrophage activation, adherence, and bactericidal activity of granulocyte oxidative burst, lymphocyte proliferation, and endotoxin binding to monocytes. |
Assessment of magnesium status.
| Test | Comments |
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| Serum magnesium | Sometimes not adequate since less than 0.3% of total body magnesium is found in serum. However, it is easy, accessible, and cheap. |
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| 24 hours excretion in urine or the fractional excretion of magnesium | Helps in differentiating renal wasting of magnesium from inadequate intake or poor absorption as an etiology for hypomagnesemia. |
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| Magnesium loading test | Identifies patients with normomagnesic magnesium deficiency. |
| Assesses intestinal absorption of magnesium. | |
| Indirectly assesses bone status of magnesium. | |
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| Magnesium concentration in RBCs | Can give early indication of magnesium deficiency. |
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| Isotopic analysis of magnesium | Assesses the absorption of magnesium from the gastrointestinal tract in research setting. |
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| Ionized magnesium | More accurate, especially in critically ill patients with rapid change in hemodynamics. |
| Not effected by low albumin. | |
RBCs: red blood cell counts.
Prevalence of hypomagnesemia in different populations and under different clinical settings.
| Authors | Country and year | Definition | Sample | Sample size | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chernow [ | USA, 1989 | <0.75 mmol/L | ICU | 193 | 61% |
| Schimatschek and Rempis [ | Germany, 2001 | <0.76 mmol/L | Unselected population | 16,000 | 14.5% |
| Cheungpasitporn et al. [ | USA, 2015 | <0.70 mmol/L | Hospitalized patients | 65,974 | 20.2% |
ICU: intensive care unit.
Clinical and laboratory manifestations of hypomagnesemia.
| System | Manifestations |
|---|---|
| Neuromuscular | Tremors, muscle fasciculation, muscle spasms and cramps, muscle contractions, numbness, tingling, and weakness. |
| Central nervous | Agitation, depression, sudden change in behavior, encephalopathy, and seizures. |
| Cardiovascular | Cardiac arrhythmia and ECG changes. |
| Gastrointestinal | Loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. |
| Metabolic | Hypokalemia and hypocalcemia. |
Figure 2Impact of hypomagnesemia.
The most common genetic disorders causing hypomagnesemia.
| Disorder | Inheritance | Gene | Other features (other than hypomagnesemia) |
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| Hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis | ||
| FHHNC type 1 | AR | CLDN16 | Polyuria/polydipsia, elevated serum PTH, and renal failure |
| FHHNC type 2 | AR | CLDN19 | Besides FHHNC type 1 features, patient has ocular abnormalities |
| ADHH Bartter syndrome type 5 | AD | CASR | Hypocalcemia with normal or low PTH |
| Bartter syndrome type 3 (classical type) | AR | CLCNKB | Gitelman-like phenotype possible, rarely nephrocalcinosis |
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| Hypocalciuria, hypokalemia, and metabolic alkalosis | ||
| Gitelman syndrome | AR | SLC12A3 | Chondrocalcinosis at older age |
| ADTKD/RCAD | AD | HNF1B | Renal, genital, and pancreatic abnormalities |
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| KSS | Mt | Mitochondrial deletion | External ophthalmoplegia, retinopathy, and cardiac conduction defects |
ADHH: autosomal dominant hypocalcemia with hypocalciuria; ADTKD: autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial kidney disease; FHHNC: familial hypomagnesemia with hypocalcemia and nephrocalcinosis; RCAD: renal cysts and diabetes; KSS: Kearns-Sayre syndrome; AR: autosomal recessive; AD: autosomal dominant.
Medications associated with hypomagnesemia.
| Medications | System | Pathophysiology |
|---|---|---|
| Aminoglycoside antibiotics | Renal | Impair renal tubular reabsorption ± acute tubular necrosis (ATN) |
| Amphotericin B | Renal | Renal toxicity and impaired magnesium reabsorption |
| Antiepidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (e.g., cetuximab) | Renal | Impairs magnesium reabsorption |
| Calcineurin inhibitors (e.g., cyclosporine and tacrolimus) | Renal | Impair magnesium reabsorption |
| Platinum derivatives (e.g., cisplatin and carboplatin) | Renal | Impair magnesium reabsorption |
| Loop and thiazide diuretics | Renal | Impair magnesium reabsorption |
| Pentamidine | Renal | Impairs magnesium reabsorption |
| Proton pump inhibitors (PPI) | GI | Reduce intestinal absorption of magnesium by downregulating the TRPM6 transporters. |
GI: gastrointestinal.
Clinical manifestations of hypermagnesemia.
| Serum magnesium levels | Manifestations |
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| 0.70–1.0 mmol/L | Normal level. |
| 2.2–3.5 mmol/L | Nausea, vomiting, facial flushing, urinary retention, ileus, and hypotension. |
| 3.9–5.2 mmol/L | Somnolence, absence of the deep tendon reflex, and complete heart blockage. |
| >6.5 mmol/L | Respiratory depression, paralysis, and complete heart blockage. |
| >8.7 mmol/L | Asystole. |
Magnesium effects on the cardiovascular system.
| Improvement in endothelial function. |
| Induction of direct and indirect vasodilation. |
| Improvement in blood pressure. |
| Beneficial effects on arrhythmias, inflammatory reactions, and platelet aggregation. |
| Potential effect in improving exercise tolerance in patients with stable coronary artery disease. |
| Improvement of insulin homeostasis and lipid metabolism. |
| Reduces platelets activation and thrombosis. |
| Reduces cellular ischemic injury by reducing calcium overload in coronary arteries. |