| Literature DB >> 32878232 |
Jeanette A Maier1, Gisele Pickering2, Elena Giacomoni3, Alessandra Cazzaniga1, Paolo Pellegrino3.
Abstract
Magnesium deficiency may occur for several reasons, such as inadequate intake or increased gastrointestinal or renal loss. A large body of literature suggests a relationship between magnesium deficiency and mild and moderate tension-type headaches and migraines. A number of double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trials have shown that magnesium is efficacious in relieving headaches and have led to the recommendation of oral magnesium for headache relief in several national and international guidelines. Among several magnesium salts available to treat magnesium deficiency, magnesium pidolate may have high bioavailability and good penetration at the intracellular level. Here, we discuss the cellular and molecular effects of magnesium deficiency in the brain and the clinical evidence supporting the use of magnesium for the treatment of headaches and migraines.Entities:
Keywords: BBB; deficiency; headache; magnesium; migraine; pidolate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32878232 PMCID: PMC7551876 DOI: 10.3390/nu12092660
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Schematic presentation of magnesium homeostasis.
Inorganic and organic salts used for magnesium supplementation [30,31,32,33,34].
| Inorganic Magnesium Salts | Organic Magnesium Salts | Combinations/Different Formulations |
|---|---|---|
| Carbonate | Acetate | Citrate + hydrogen- |
| Chloride | Aspartate | Dicitrate |
| Oxide | Citrate | Glycinate lysinate chelate |
| Sulfate | Gluconate | Oxide + glycerophosphate |
| Lactate | Pyrrolidone carboxylic acid | |
| Pidolate | Trimagnesium dicitrate | |
| U-aspartate-hydrochloride-trihydrate |
Studies investigating the relationship between magnesium levels and headache.
| Year | Type of Headache | Number of Patients | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1985 | Migraine | 57 adults | Reduced magnesium levels in cerebrospinal fluid | [ |
| 1989 | Migraine | 11 adults | Reduced magnesium levels in the brain | [ |
| 1995 | Cluster | 22 adults | Up to 50% of migraine patients were found to be magnesium-deficient | [ |
| 2000 | Migraine | 29 adults plus 18 healthy controls | Total magnesium in erythrocytes significantly increased compared with healthy controls | [ |
| 2002 | Tension/migraine | 25 adults plus 20 healthy controls | Reduced magnesium levels in serum and saliva | [ |
| 2002 | Migraine | 20 adults plus 20 healthy controls | Increased systemic retention of magnesium vs. controls | [ |
| 2011 | Migraine | 140 adults plus 140 healthy controls | Total serum magnesium levels significantly lower vs. controls | [ |
| 2012 | Migraine | 50 adults plus 50 healthy controls | Total serum magnesium levels significantly lower vs. controls | [ |
| 2016 | Acute migraine | 40 adults plus 40 healthy controls | Decreased magnesium indicates a 35-fold increased risk of acute migraine | [ |
Figure 2Mechanisms involved in migraine and possible role of magnesium. CGRP, circulating calcitonin gene-related peptide; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; NO, nitric oxide.
Efficacy and safety of magnesium in treating headache symptoms.
| Type of Study | Author/Year | Study Length | Country | Type of Headache | Number of Patients | Magnesium Salt | Efficacy Outcome | Safety Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| Multi-arm | Aloisi, 1997 | 20 days | Italy | Tension, migraine | 60 male and female children 6–13 years | 1500 mg daily oral magnesium pidolate | 20 days treatment sufficiently normalizes serum Magnesium levels in 90% of migraine patients | NR | [ |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial | Wang, 2003 | 16 weeks | USA | Migraine | 118 male and female children 3–17 years (n = 60, placebo) | 9 mg/kg daily oral magnesium oxide | Significant reduction in headache days | NR | [ |
| Open label trial | Grazzi, 2007 | 3 months | Italy | Tension | 45 male and female children 8–16 years | 2250 mg x2 daily oral magnesium pidolate | Headache days decreased by 69.9% | No significant side effects | [ |
|
| |||||||||
| Double-blind, controlled, randomized, crossover trial | Karimi, 2019 | 24 weeks | Iran | Migraine | 63 adult male and females | 500 mg daily oral magnesium oxide (800 mg sodium valproate) | Magnesium oxide appears to be as effective as valproate in migraine prophylaxis without significant adverse effects | No side effects on top of headache symptoms | [ |
| Systematic review (five clinical trials below) | Von Luckner, 2018 | 2–4 months | Various countries | Migraine | Five clinical trials of adult male and females | Different salts different doses | Possibly effective in preventing migraine. Safe and cost efficient | NA | [ |
| 1. Double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial | Facchinetti, 1991 | 2 months | Italy | Menstrual migraine | 20 females | 360 mg daily oral magnesium pyrrolidone carboxylic acid | Significant reduction in the frequency of headache and total pain index | NR | [ |
| 2. Double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial | Peikert, 1996 | 12 weeks | Germany | Migraine | 81 male and female adults (n = 38, placebo) | 600 mg daily oral trimagnesium dicitrate | Significant improvement in patients on active therapy | Diarrhoea and gastric complaints (mild and tolerable) | [ |
| 3. Double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial | Pfaffenrath, 1996 | 12 weeks | Germany | Migraine | 69 male and female adults (n = 34, placebo) | 242 mg daily oral magnesium-u-aspartate-hydrochloride-trihydrate | No effect | Soft stool, diarrhoea (mild) | [ |
| 4. Double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial | Koseoglu, 2008 | 3 months | Turkey | Migraine | 40 male and female adults (n = 10, placebo) | 600 mg daily oral magnesium citrate | Migraine attack frequency, severity, and P1 amplitude decreased | Diarrhoea, soft stools, gastric irritation (mild) | [ |
| 5. Multicenter, crossover trial | Taubert, 1994 | 2 × 2 months | Germany | Migraine | 63 adult male and females | 600 mg daily oral trimagnesium dicitrate or placebo | Statistically significant reduction in the frequency of attacks compared with placebo | Diarrhoea | [ |
NA, not applicable; NR, not reported.