Fluids, Electrolytes, Acid-Base Disorders, and Nutrition Support
Magnesium homeostasis overview
99% intracellular (17% of total body content is in the muscle or in the skeleton)
Total body stores: Around 2000 mEq
Normal serum concentration: 1.8โ2.4 mg/dL (about 30% bound to protein)
| d. | Average daily requirement: Around 24โ32 mEq/day |
|---|
Kidney is primary route of elimination (around 70% reabsorbed in ascending loop of Henle) and is
without any hormonal regulation of renal magnesium reabsorption.
Losses can be extensive with severe diarrhea or body fluid drainages (see Table 4).
Magnesium depletion can influence potassium and calcium homeostasis.
Definition: Although the lower limit of normal for serum magnesium concentrations is 1.8 mg/
dL (1.5 mEq/L), most clinicians define significant hypomagnesemia as 1.5 mg/dL (1.3 mEq/L) or
less (Annu Rev Med 1981;32:245-59; Nutrition 1997;13:303-8). Many ICUs have a target serum
magnesium concentration greater than 2 mg/dL (1.8 mEq/L). Serum concentrations of magnesium
may be slightly falsely lowered in the presence of significant hypoalbuminemia (Annu Rev Med
1981;32:245-59; Nutrition 1997;13:303-8).
Signs and symptoms: Muscle weakness, cramping, paresthesias, Chvostek and Trousseau signs,
tetany, QT prolongation, hypokalemia, hypocalcemia
Etiologies:
GI losses (especially diarrhea) โ Average stool loss of about 6 mEq/L; up to 10โ12 mEq/L or
greater for secretory diarrheal losses
ii.
Alcohol abuse (increased renal excretion; impaired absorption; poor nutritional status of
patients with alcohol use disorder)
iii.
Sepsis/critical illness (increased urinary excretion โ several factors)
iv.
Pancreatitis (partly attributable to calcium-magnesium soap formation in peritoneum)
Thermal injury/TBI (increased urinary excretion โ several factors)
vi.
Drugs โ Diuretics, amphotericin B, caspofungin, cyclosporin/tacrolimus, foscarnet,
pentamidine, piperacillin/tazobactam, cisplatin/carboplatin/ifosfamide/cetuximab, lactulose/
orlistat, aminoglycosides, and potentially long-term use of digoxin or proton pump inhibitors
vii.
Polyuria (osmotic agents, hypercalcemia, ureagenesis)
| d. | Estimating magnesium deficit: For a serum magnesium concentration of less than 1.5 mg/dL (1.3 |
|---|
mEq/L), a 1- to 2-mEq/kg deficit can be expected.
Treatment:
Treat the etiology (if possible). Be sure to treat magnesium deficiency at the same time or
before potassium therapy if the patient is also hypokalemic.
ii.
Successful treatment of hypomagnesemia usually takes 4โ5 days of intravenous therapy.
Intramuscular magnesium therapy for replacement therapy is inadvisable given the limit on
volume per injection site with respect to dosage requirements and tissue irritation.
iii.
Intravenous magnesium sulfate 32โ48 mEq/day (4โ6 g/day) โ Suggested to be sufficient to
maintain serum magnesium within 2โ2.5 mg/dL for most magnesium-deficient patients (Crit