Total Serum Magnesium Level in ICU In-patients under Mechanical Ventilation

"Since hypomagnesemia is the most common idiopathic unknown electrolyte disturbance among the ICU in-patients leading to increased ICU stay, prolonged mechanical ventilation, and increased treatment costs, this study aimed at investigating the total serum magnesium level of ICU patients under mechanical ventilation. This cross-sectional study was conducted on 100 ICU in-patients under mechanical ventilation hospitalized in Be'that Hospital in Hamedan, Iran, aged 16+ years with an APACHII score of <20. At first, the total serum magnesium level was measured on day 1, day 2, and at discharge, and its correlation with ICU stay and mechanical ventilation time was estimated. Our findings showed that on the first day, 43% of the patients had hypomagnesaemia, and 57% had normomagnesemia. On the second day, 23% of the patients had hypomagnesemia and 77% had normomagnesemia. Also, at discharge, 97% of the patients had normomagnesemia and 3% had hypermagnesemia. The ICU stay, mechanical ventilation time, and intubation of the hypomagnesemic patients were significantly higher than those of the normomagnesemics (P-value<0.05). Vigilant monitoring of the serum magnesium level in the ICU and prompt treatment lead to decreased ICU and hospital stay and reduced mechanical ventilation time."

[1]  S. Saeed,et al.  SERUM MAGNESIUM LEVEL IMPACT ON THE OUTCOME OF PATIENTS ADMITTED TO THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT , 2010 .

[2]  M. Safavi,et al.  Admission hypomagnesemia--impact on mortality or morbidity in critically ill patients. , 2007, Middle East journal of anaesthesiology.

[3]  Beth Augustyn Ventilator-associated pneumonia: risk factors and prevention. , 2007, Critical care nurse.

[4]  Y. Arabi,et al.  Magnesium supplementation and the potential association with mortality rates among critically ill non-cardiac patients. , 2006, Saudi medical journal.

[5]  R. Rude,et al.  Magnesium Deficiency in Critical Illness , 2005, Journal of intensive care medicine.

[6]  V. Martínez-Vizcaíno,et al.  Total and ionized serum magnesium in critically ill patients , 2004, Intensive Care Medicine.

[7]  H. M. Soliman,et al.  Development of ionized hypomagnesemia is associated with higher mortality rates , 2003, Critical care medicine.

[8]  R. Warters,et al.  The simultaneous measurement of ionized and total calcium and ionized and total magnesium in intensive care unit patients. , 2002, Journal of critical care.

[9]  C. Fox,et al.  Magnesium: Its Proven and Potential Clinical Significance , 2001, Southern medical journal.

[10]  Y. Huang Malnutrition in the critically ill. , 2001, Nutrition.

[11]  G T Sanders,et al.  Magnesium levels in critically ill patients. What should we measure? , 2000, American journal of clinical pathology.

[12]  C. Yen,et al.  Nutritional status of mechanically ventilated critically ill patients: comparison of different types of nutritional support. , 2000, Clinical nutrition.

[13]  R. McNally Today's World , 1996 .