- Common Electrolyte Abnormality: Hypomagnesemia frequently occurs in critically ill patients.
- Intracellular Cation: Magnesium is a major intracellular ion.
- Energy Utilization: Plays a key role in energy transfer, storage, and utilization.
- Enzyme Co-factor: Essential for membrane Na+/K+ ATPase activity, contributing to membrane stabilization.
- Physiological Roles:
- Nerve Transmission: Involved in the transmission of nerve impulses.
- Cardiac Excitability: Crucial for heart rhythm stability.
- Neuromuscular Conduction: Facilitates muscle nerve signaling.
- Muscular Contraction: Important for muscle function.
- Vasomotor Tone: Regulates blood vessel tone.
- Administration: Intravenous magnesium sulfate (IV MgSO4) is commonly used for treatment.
Causes of Hypomagnesemia (RRID)
- Reduced Intake:
- Total parenteral nutrition (TPN)
- Gastrointestinal loss (malabsorption, malnutrition, Crohn’s disease, celiac disease)
- Chronic alcoholism
- Poorly controlled type 2 diabetes
- Redistribution:
- Insulin therapy
- Hungry bone syndrome
- Increased Loss:
- Diarrhea
- Nasogastric (N/G) secretions
- Renal disorders
- Renal tubular acidosis (RTA)
- Drugs:
- Amphotericin B
- Aminoglycosides
- Carbenicillin
- Diuretics
- PPI
- Prolonged use of PPIs has been associated with hypomagnesemia.
- Measure magnesium levels before and periodically during prolonged PPI treatment, especially with concomitant digoxin or other hypomagnesemia-inducing drugs.
Effects of Hypomagnesemia
- Early signs of deficiency include
- loss of appetite
- nausea
- vomiting
- fatigue
- weakness.
- Neurological:
- Confusion
- Irritability
- Delirium
- Tremors
- Cardiac:
- Tachyarrhythmias: Wide QRS, prolonged PR interval, ventricular arrhythmias, Torsades de Pointes
- Refractory hypokalemia and hypocalcemia
- Metabolic:
- hypokalaemia, hypocalcaemia
Therapeutic Indications
- Magnesium Deficiency: Increased mortality and prolonged ICU stay if untreated.
- Arrhythmias: Post-ischemia or cardiac surgery
- Post Myocardial Infarction (MI)
- Asthma/Severe Bronchospasm
- Pre-eclampsia/Eclampsia
- Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH) Management
- Tocolytic Agent: Used in labor management
- Pheochromocytoma Surgery
- Hypokalemia: Hypomagnesemia must be corrected
- Irukandji Syndrome: Unproven efficacy
Eclampsia
- Standard of Care: Magnesium sulfate is the treatment of choice.
- Efficacy: Reduces the rate of progression from pre-eclampsia to eclampsia by half.
- Seizure Management: More effective than phenytoin or benzodiazepines (MAGPIE trial 2002, Cochrane review 2003).
- Dosage: 4g IV over 5 minutes, followed by 1g/hr (target level: 2-4 mmol/L).
Arrhythmias
- Diagnosis Challenges: Total body magnesium deficiency difficult to diagnose.
- Post Cardiac Surgery: IV magnesium shown to reduce post-op atrial fibrillation (AF) and ventricular arrhythmias.
- Guidelines: Not currently endorsed by AHA/European Heart Association.
- Comparison to Amiodarone: May be as effective for treating rapid AF (Critical Care Med, 1995).
- Torsades de Pointes: Recommended treatment but no RCTs.
- Digitalis-induced Arrhythmias: Effective management.
Post Myocardial Infarction
- Controversy: Conflicting evidence.
- Early Trials: LIMIT2 showed mortality benefit.
- Later Trials: ISIS4 and MAGIC unable to replicate findings.
Asthma/Bronchospasm
- Effectiveness: Improves FEV1 and PEFR in severe cases, no mortality improvement.
- Selected Patients: May benefit more, particularly pediatric patients.
- Dosage: 5-10 mmol IV over 20 minutes.
- Cochrane Review: 2000 review suggests more trials needed.
SAH Management
- Animal Studies: IV magnesium effective in reversing induced vasospasm (Stroke, 1991).
- Human Studies: Mixed results; additional benefits when combined with nimodipine (Neurosurgery 2000, Stroke 2005, Journal of Neurosurgery 2002).
- Controversy: Latest trials inconclusive.
Replacement
- IV Therapy: For symptomatic patients.
- Oral Sustained-Release Preparations: For asymptomatic and enterally fed patients.
- Concurrent Issues: Correct hypokalemia and hypocalcemia when present.
Preferred Magnesium Preparations
- First Line:
- Magnesium-L-aspartate (MagMin@; Mag-Sup@):
- Preferred choice for treatment and prevention of magnesium deficiency in adults, adolescents, and children from 2 years.
- 1.55 mmol per tablet/37.4 mg per tablet
- Second Line:
- Magnesium glycerophosphate (Neomag®): For those unable to tolerate Magnaspartate. Available as 4 mmol chewable tablets, licensed for treatment and prevention in adults, adolescents, and children from 4 years.
- Magnesium glycerophosphate liquid (MagnaPhos®): Unlicensed but manufactured to GMP standards, most cost-effective liquid for those unable to take licensed preparations.
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