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Magnesium

From Surgopaedia

Physiology

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  • Essential element for utilisation of energy - needed to release energy from ATP
  • Also used to maintain the sodium-potassium exchange pump across cell membranes, and regulating calcium movement into smooth muscle cells
  • More than half is found in bone, with <1% in plasma. Therefore serum magnesium is not actually that useful of a measurement.
  • 67% of the magnesium in plasma is in the ionised (active) form, and 33% bound to plasma proteins or chelated. The standard assay measures all three.
  • Normally, only small amounts of magnesium is secreted in the urine, and this is highly conserved when magnesium intake is deficient.


Hypermagnesaemia

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  • Aetiology
    • Almost always iatrogenic in setting of impaired renal function
    • Haemolysis
    • DKA
    • Adrenal insufficiency
    • Hyperparathyroidism
    • Lithium intoxication
  • Symptoms
    • Muscle paralysis
    • CNS depression
  • Management
    • Dialysis
    • IV calcium gluconate stabilises the cardiac membrane until dialysis is started
    • Aggressive volume infusion and furosemide can work in mild derangements and preserved renal function

Hypomagnesaemia

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  • Common in early recovery period after being critically ill - seen in 65% of ICU patients, and the true incidence is probably higher, because we can't exactly measure total body magnesium depletion.
  • Predisposing factors
    • Drugs
      • Furosemide - seen in 50% of patients on furosemide
      • Thiazide diuretics
      • Aminoglycosides (seen in 30%), amphotericin, pentamidine
      • Digitalis
      • Cisplatin, cyclosporine
    • Diarrhoea (secretory)
    • Chronic alcohol abuse - generalised malnutrition, chronic diarrhoea
    • Diabetes mellitus
    • Acute MI
  • Clinical findings
    • Neurologic
      • Altered mentation through to seizures
      • All are uncommon
    • Dysrhythmias
      • Torsade de pointes
      • Magnesium deficiency magnify the digitalis effect and promote digitalis cardiotoxicity
    • Other electrolytes
      • Hypokalaemia - need to replete mag prior to fixing K
      • Hypophosphataemia - this is a cause of magnesium depletion, not an effect
      • Hypocalcaemia - impaired PTH release
  • Diagnosis
    • Urinary magnesium excretion in response to a magnesium load is a more sensitive test for hypomagnesaemia than serum mag level. This test can be useful for determining the end-point of magnesium replacement therapy.
  • Treatment
    • Best done IV in the acute phase (oral magnesium salts can cause diarrhoea, and intestinal absorption of magnesium is erratic)
    • Chronic therapy can be given orally
    • Standard preparation is magnesium sulfate
    • Regime as per UTD:
      • <0.7mmol/L: 4-8mmol replacement
      • 0.4-0.6: 8-16mmol
      • <0.4: 16-32mmol