| Literature DB >> 35422757 |
Mark Eskander1, Mohammed S Razzaque1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: disease; health; hypomagnesemia; magnesium; vitamin D
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35422757 PMCID: PMC9001958 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2022.843152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Simplified diagram showing regulation of magnesium homeostasis.
Figure 2Simplified diagram of the different stages of vitamin D synthesis and role of magnesium in the activation of vitamin D; modified from earlier publications. For simplicity, only the essential steps of vitamin synthesis are included. VDR, vitamin D receptor; DBP, vitamin D binding protein.
Published studies with magnesium status in patients with COVID-19.
| Investigators | Number of patients studied | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Zeng et al. ( | 306 | COVID-19 patients with lower magnesium levels had more severe symptoms. |
| Alamdari et al. ( | 396 | COVID-19 patients with higher magnesium levels had lower mortality rates. |
| Gunay et al. ( | 629 | COVID-19 patients with lower magnesium levels had a higher degree of myocardial damage. |
| Zhu et al. ( | 83 | Hypomagnesemia was more prevalent in COVID-19 patients who did not survive. |
| Beigmohammadi et al. ( | 60 | Lower magnesium levels in COVID-19 patients correlated to higher disease severity and risk of mortality. |
| Pulido-Perez et al. ( | 118 | Lower magnesium levels were associated with increased mortality. |
| Quilliot et al. ( | 300 | Hypomagnesemia was associated with 61% of all patients in study. Moderate cases were associated with hypomagnesemia; critical cases were associated with higher magnesium levels. |
| Sharma et al. ( | 193 | Severity of the disease was greater in patients with hypermagnesemia. |