Magnesium Administration in Chronic Kidney Disease.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the clinical relevance and safety of magnesium administration in people with chronic kidney disease (CKD), focusing on its effects on vascular calcification, mineral metabolism, and cardiovascular outcomes.
Results Summary
The study found that magnesium administration improved parameters of vascular function, calcification, and mineral metabolism in people with CKD, with no severe adverse effects or hypermagnesemia reported. Several ongoing studies are expected to further validate these findings.
Population
People with chronic kidney disease (CKD).
Effective Dosage
Daily dosage of elemental magnesium varied highly between studies (not specified).
Duration
Not specified.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
magnesium administration | increase | parameters of vascular function and calcification and mineral metabolism | people with CKD | - | could improve | #1 |
magnesium administration | no change | - | people with CKD | - | is safe | #2 |
magnesium administration | no change | severe hypermagnesemia | people with CKD | - | without concerns for severe hypermagnesemia | #3 |
magnesium administration | no change | bone metabolism | people with CKD | - | without concerns for negative interference | #4 |
Awareness of the clinical relevance of magnesium in medicine has increased over the last years, especially for people with chronic kidney disease (CKD), due to magnesium's role in vascular calcification and mineral metabolism. The inverse association between serum magnesium and clinically relevant, adverse outcomes is well-established in people with CKD. Subsequent intervention studies have focused on the effect of magnesium administration, mainly in relation to cardiovascular diseases, mineral bone metabolism, and other metabolic parameters. The most commonly used routes of magnesium administration are orally and by increasing dialysate magnesium. Several oral magnesium formulations are available and the daily dosage of elemental magnesium varies highly between studies, causing considerable heterogeneity. Although data are still limited, several clinical studies demonstrated that magnesium administration could improve parameters of vascular function and calcification and mineral metabolism in people with CKD. Current clinical research has shown that magnesium administration in people with CKD is safe, without concerns for severe hypermagnesemia or negative interference with bone metabolism. It should be noted that there are several ongoing magnesium intervention studies that will contribute to the increasing knowledge on the potential of magnesium administration in people with CKD.