| Literature DB >> 34221945 |
Ivan Urits1,2, Jai Won Jung3, Ariunzaya Amgalan3, Luc Fortier3, Anthony Anya3, Brendan Wesp3, Vwaire Orhurhu4, Elyse M Cornett1, Alan D Kaye1, Farnad Imani5, Giustino Varrassi6, Henry Liu7, Omar Viswanath1,8,9,10.
Abstract
CONTEXT: The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines chronic pain as pain that persists or recurs for longer than 3 months. Chronic pain has a significant global disease burden with profound effects on health, quality of life, and socioeconomic costs. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: Narrative review.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal Pain; Chronic Pain; Chronic Regional Pain Syndrome; Infusion; Intravenous; Magnesium Sulfate; Peripheral Neuropathy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34221945 PMCID: PMC8236839 DOI: 10.5812/aapm.112348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesth Pain Med ISSN: 2228-7523
Magnesium Treatment for Migraines
| Author | Groups Studied and Intervention | Results & Findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Case control of patients receiving IV magnesium who had low or high ionized serum magnesium levels | Complete elimination of pain in 32 of 40 patients (80%) within 15 minutes of magnesium infusion | Low serum and brain tissue ionized magnesium levels may play a role in headache symptoms |
|
| Case series of patients with cluster headaches receiving IV magnesium | 76% of the infusions showed a correlation between a pain relief response and an ionized magnesium level below a certain threshold; only 9 out of the 22 (41%) patients enrolled reported clinically significant relief | Measurements of ionized magnesium may prove useful in identifying patients who may benefit from magnesium treatment |
|
| Randomized control trial comparing IV prochlorperazine to IV magnesium for treatment of patients presenting to ED with an acute headache | 90% of the prochlorperazine group reported complete or partial pain relief, while only 56% of the magnesium group reported complete or partial relief; there was no difference in ionized magnesium levels between those who responded and those who did not | Magnesium infusion was less effective than prochlorperazine in treating headaches in the ED |
|
| Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial comparing IV magnesium to placebo in patients presenting to the ED with an acute benign headache | Greater improvement in pain scores in the placebo group than the magnesium group; there were more side effects documented in the magnesium group | IV magnesium therapy is not recommended in patients with acute benign headache |
|
| Pilot study investigating the effectiveness of IV magnesium in treating acute migraine attacks | Pain relief was reported to last at least 24 hours post-infusion in 18 of 21 patients (86%) who had low serum ionized magnesium levels, while only 3 of 19 patients (16%) reported similar pain relief in those who had high levels of ionized magnesium | The results indicated a very strong relationship between migraine reduction and low ionized magnesium levels |
|
| Randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled trial comparing IV magnesium to placebo in moderate to severe migraine attacks | 100% response rate in the magnesium group compared to a 7% response rate in the placebo, with greater pain-free rates in the magnesium group as compared to placebo (87% versus 0%) | Magnesium is an efficient, safe, and well-tolerated therapy for acute migraines |
|
| Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial comparing IV metoclopramide plus IV magnesium sulfate or IV metoclopramide plus a placebo of IV saline | Pain scores were improved in both groups; unexpectedly the improvement was smaller in the magnesium group than the placebo group (16-point difference on the visual analog scale); normal functional status following intervention also favored the placebo group | Addition of magnesium sulfate attenuates the therapeutic benefit experienced with IV metoclopramide |
|
| Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial comparing magnesium sulphate alone or metoclopramide alone as compared to placebo | Patients receiving placebo required a higher rate of rescue medication; no differences in pain scores were seen between the magnesium, metoclopramide, and placebo groups | IV magnesium and metoclopramide were no more effective than placebo in treating pain from acute migraine attacks |
|
| Double-blind, randomized controlled trial comparing magnesium sulfate to the combination of dexamethasone/metoclopramide | Magnesium sulfate was associated with significantly decreased pain scores at all time intervals as compared to the dexamethasone/metoclopramide group | Dexamethasone may decrease the efficacy of metoclopramide when used in combination to treat migraine headaches |
|
| Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial investigated magnesium sulphate vs placebo in patients controlling for migraine without aura and migraine with aura. | Magnesium was no different than placebo with respect to pain relief in treating migraines without aura, but magnesium did improve the associated symptoms of photophobia and phonophobia in this group; patients with migraines with aura received a statistically significant improvement in pain and all associated symptoms with magnesium therapy as compared to placebo. | Magnesium infusion is an effective singular therapy for migraine with aura, and may be used as an adjunct to treat the associated symptoms in migraines with and without aura. |
|
| Prospective quasi-experimental study comparing IV caffeine to IV magnesium | Reduced pain scores were observed in both groups but the magnesium group exhibited better improvement than the caffeine group at one- and two-hour post-infusion | Magnesium is superior to caffeine in the short term management of migraine headaches |
|
| Retrospective chart review of patient receiving IV magnesium to treat status migrainosus. | 144 (44%) patients that received IV magnesium did not require additional IM rescue medications, averaging a 44% reduction in pain; patients with initial lower pain intensity tended to respond better than those with more severe initial pain. | Magnesium should be the first parental option due to the subset of patients who responded significantly, minimal risk profile and cost effectiveness of therapy. |
|
| Meta-analysis of 5 RCTs using IV magnesium to treat acute migraines in adults. | The number of patients who received headache relief 30 minutes after infusion was 7% higher in the control groups as compared to the magnesium groups; patients treated with magnesium also had a 37% higher rate of side-effects or adverse events than controls. | The authors did not draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of magnesium infusion for this indication. |
|
| Meta-analysis of 21 RCTs investigating IV magnesium for acute migraines or oral magnesium for migraine prophylaxis. | IV magnesium relieved acute migraines within 15 - 45 minutes, 120 minutes, and 24 hours post-infusion with an OR of 0.23, 0.20, 0.25, respectively; oral magnesium was found to significantly reduce the frequency (OR = 0.20) and intensity (OR = 0.27) of migraines. | IV and oral magnesium should be part of a multimodal treatment regimen for migraines. |
|
| Systematic review of 7 RCTs that used IV magnesium to treat either migraine headaches or benign non-traumatic headaches in the ED. | The evidence indicates potential benefits of magnesium beyond 1 hour of infusion. | Unable to provide a conclusion due to the heterogeneity of comparison groups, dose of magnesium, and methods and timing of pain assessments. |
|
| Case series describing 20 pediatric patients who received IV magnesium for acute treatment of headaches. | Of 13 adolescents that were treated in the ED, 10 were admitted for further headache treatment and 3 were discharged; there was a total of 4 reported side effects, including 1 episode of pain, 1 episode of redness, 1 episode of burning, and 1 episode of decreased respiratory rate without change in oxygenation. | Further investigation into the effectiveness of treatment for pediatric patients is required. |
Magnesium Treatment for Abdominal Pain
| Author | Groups Studied and Intervention | Results and Findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 30 patients undergoing hysterectomy and/or myomectomy randomized to bolus dose of MgSO4 50 mg/kg followed by continuous infusion MgSO4 8 mg/kg/h or placebo. | Decreased pain score and opioid consumption at 30 minutes, 2, 4 and 12 hours in MgSO4 group. Pain scores were similar between groups at 24 hours. | MgSO4 may be an effective adjuvant therapy for the treatment of acute postoperative abdominal pain. MgSO4 likely reduces the need for opioid medications in the acute postoperative period. |
|
| 40 patients undergoing elective total abdominal hysterectomy randomized to low dose continuous infusion MgSO4 15 mg/kg/h or placebo. | Decreased pain score at 6 and 12 hours, no difference between groups at 24 hours. Decreased 24 hours opioid consumption in MgSO4 group. | MgSO4 may be an effective adjuvant therapy for the treatment of acute postoperative abdominal pain. MgSO4 likely reduces the need for opioid medications in the acute postoperative period. |
|
| 60 patients undergoing abdominal hysterectomy randomized to bolus dose of MgSO4 50 mg/kg or placebo. | Decreased pain score immediately after surgery, 1, 2, 6 and 12 hours after surgery in MgSO4 group. Decreased opioid consumption at 1, 2, 6, 12 hours after surgery in MgSO4 group | MgSO4 may be an effective adjuvant therapy for the treatment of acute postoperative abdominal pain. MgSO4 may reduce the need for opioid medications in the acute postoperative period. |
Magnesium Treatment for Peripheral Neuropathy
| Author | Groups Studied and Intervention | Results & Findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 30 patients with refractory PHN randomized to MgSO4 30 mg/kg/h or ketamine 1 mg/kg/h in a total of 3 sessions | Decrease in VAS score for both groups at 2 weeks compared to baseline | Ketamine and MgSO4 are effective at reducing pain in PHN |
|
| 353 patients receiving FOLFOX therapy randomized to: intravenous Ca/Mg 1g/1g before and after oxaliplatin, placebo before and after oxaliplatin, or Ca/Mg 1g/1g before oxaliplatin and placebo after. | No significant differences between the 3 groups at reducing cumulative neurotoxicity. | CaMg is not effective at preventing oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy. |
|
| 20 patients with neuropathic pain receiving ketamine/MgSO4, ketamine alone, and placebo at 35-day intervals. | No significant differences between the 3 groups in reducing daily pain intensity or secondary measures. | Ketamine/MgSO4 failed to improve pain intensity and other secondary measures. |
. Magnesium Treatment for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
| Author | Groups Studied and Intervention | Results & Findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Pilot study comparing IV magnesium sulphate infusion to placebo NaCl 0.9% infusion. | Pain scores were significantly reduced at all time points in the group receiving magnesium; impairment level and QOL measures were also significantly improved at 12 weeks post-infusion in the magnesium group, while the improvement in sensory subscale was only appreciated at 1-week post-infusion; magnesium group did not show improvement in skin sensitivity or functional limitations. | Magnesium may play a beneficial role in treating CRPS with little to no side effects. |
|
| Double-blind placebo-controlled trial compared IV magnesium sulphate infusion to placebo NaCl 0.9% infusion. | No significant difference in Box-11 pain scores and impairment scores between the magnesium group and placebo group at different time points. | IV therapy of magnesium has no additional benefit in treating chronic type 1 CRPS as compared to placebo. |
|
| Case report of a female with chronic CRPS who received peripartum IV magnesium for preeclampsia. | Complete resolution of CRPS-related pain during magnesium infusion. | The first case report to describe CRPS-associated pain relief while on peripartum magnesium therapy. |
Magnesium Treatment for Other Pain Conditions
| Author | Groups studied | Intervention | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Lower back pain with neuropathic component, N = 80 | IV Magnesium sulfate (1g/day for 1st 2 weeks), oral magnesium 500 mg twice daily for weeks 3 - 6) | Reduction of 37% in 11-point NRS, improved lumbar range of motion at 6 months. |
|
| Fibromyalgia, N = 74 | IV infusions of one of the following: lidocaine 5 mg/kg; lidocaine 7.5 mg/kg; lidocaine 7.5 mg/kg + 1 g magnesium sulfate | Significant reduction in 11-point NRS with Lidocaine 7.5 mg/kg immediately post-treatment. Non-significant, positive trend with adjunct magnesium |