Hypermagnesemia
Background
- High >3.5
- Magnesium is an effective calcium channel blocker both extracellularly and intracellularly[1]
- Intracellular magnesium profoundly blocks several cardiac potassium channels
Clinical Features
- Nausea and vomiting
- Loss of reflexes and diaphragmatic paralysis (at very high levels)
Mg Level | Signs/Symptoms |
---|---|
2-3 | Nausea |
3-4 | Somnolence |
4-8 | Loss of DTRs, muscle weakness |
8-12 | Respiratory depression |
12-15 | Hypotension, heart block, Cardiac Arrest, death |
Differential Diagnosis
- Renal Failure
- Lithium
- Volume depletion
- Rhabdo
- IV Mg (goal in PET/eclampsia 5-7 mEq/L)
- Massive PO intake (laxative abusers, accidental Epsom salts)
- Magnesium enemas[2]
Evaluation
- Magnesium level >3.5
Management
- IVF
- Furosemide 20-40mg IV
- Calcium chloride 10% 5-10mL IV or calcium gluconate 10% 15-30mL IV over 5min
- Consider hemodialysis for Mg >8 or poor renal function
Disposition
References
- Rizzo MA, Fisher M, Lock JP. Hypermagnesemic pseudocoma. Arch Intern Med. 1993;153(9):1130.
- Schelling Fatal hypermagnesemia. JR1. Clin Nephrol. 2000 Jan;53(1):61-5.
This article is issued from
Wikem.
The text is licensed under Creative
Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.