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The Effects of High Level Magnesium Dialysis/Substitution Fluid on Magnesium Homeostasis under Regional Citrate Anticoagulation in Critically Ill.

PloS one
January 1, 2016
Mychajlo Zakharchenko et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleObservational StudyHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate whether a calcium-free fluid with higher magnesium concentration (1.50 mmol/l) could maintain adequate magnesium levels during continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) with regional citrate anticoagulation (RCA) without requiring additional magnesium supplementation.

Results Summary

The study found that using a fluid with 1.50 mmol/l magnesium maintained balanced magnesium levels and adequate arterial magnesium concentrations during CRRT with RCA, eliminating the need for extra magnesium replenishment. Higher blood flow and citrate dosage further stabilized magnesium balance.

Population

Patients (n = 45) on CRRT with RCA for renal indications.

Effective Dosage

1.50 mmol/l magnesium in calcium-free fluid.

Duration

Not specified in the abstract.

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (8)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l
no change
median balance of Mg
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
close to zero (0.02 (-0.12-0.18) mmol/h)
provided even balances
#1
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l
increase
arterial levels of Mg
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
mildly increased
increased
#2
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l
increase
arterial levels of Mg
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
-
provided adequate levels
#3
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l
decrease
extra magnesium replenishment
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
-
eliminated need for
#4
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 0.75 mmol/l with additional magnesium substitution
decrease
median balance of Mg
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
-0.91 (-1.18 to -0.53) mmol/h
resulted in
#5
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l
increase
median balance of Mg
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
0.2 (0.06-0.35) mmol/h
resulted in
#6
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l with higher blood flow and dosage of citrate
no change
median balance of Mg
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
0.02 (-0.12-0.18) mmol/h
resulted in
#7
calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l at 3,000 ml/h
increase
median balance of Mg
patients on CRRT with RCA modality
0.15 (-0.11-0.25) mmol/h
increased
#8
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The requirements for magnesium (Mg) supplementation increase under regional citrate anticoagulation (RCA) because citrate acts by chelation of bivalent cations within the blood circuit. The level of magnesium in commercially available fluids for continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) may not be sufficient to prevent hypomagnesemia. METHODS: Patients (n = 45) on CRRT (2,000 ml/h, blood flow (Qb) 100 ml/min) with RCA modality (4% trisodium citrate) using calcium free fluid with 0.75 mmol/l of Mg with additional magnesium substitution were observed after switch to the calcium-free fluid with magnesium concentration of 1.50 mmol/l (n = 42) and no extra magnesium replenishment. All patients had renal indications for CRRT, were treated with the same devices, filters and the same postfilter ionized calcium endpoint (<0.4 mmol/l) of prefilter citrate dosage. Under the high level Mg fluid the Qb, dosages of citrate and CRRT were consequently escalated in 9h steps to test various settings. RESULTS: Median balance of Mg was -0.91 (-1.18 to -0.53) mmol/h with Mg 0.75 mmol/l and 0.2 (0.06-0.35) mmol/h when fluid with Mg 1.50 mmol/l was used. It was close to zero (0.02 (-0.12-0.18) mmol/h) with higher blood flow and dosage of citrate, increased again to 0.15 (-0.11-0.25) mmol/h with 3,000 ml/h of high magnesium containing fluid (p<0.001). The arterial levels of Mg were mildly increased after the change for high level magnesium containing fluid (p<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Compared to ordinary dialysis fluid the mildly hypermagnesemic fluid provided even balances and adequate levels within ordinary configurations of CRRT with RCA and without a need for extra magnesium replenishment. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01361581.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdolescentAdultAgedAnticoagulantsCitratesCitric AcidCritical IllnessDialysis SolutionsFemaleHemofiltrationHomeostasisHumansKidneyMagnesiumMaleMiddle AgedProspective StudiesRenal DialysisRenal Insufficiency
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations11
Citations/Year1.2
Relative Citation Ratio0.57
NIH Percentile30.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.71
Normalized Score0.55
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