Hypomagnesemia

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Hypomagnesemia

tACCP - Week 20 - Renal

tACCP - Week 20 - Renal

Anatomy of the abdominal viscera: Kidneys, ureters and suprarenal glands
Anatomy clinical correlates: Other abdominal organs
Anatomy of the urinary organs of the pelvis
Anatomy of the female urogenital triangle
Anatomy of the perineum
Anatomy of the male urogenital triangle
Anatomy clinical correlates: Male pelvis and perineum
Anatomy clinical correlates: Female pelvis and perineum
Ureter, bladder and urethra histology
Kidney histology
Renal system anatomy and physiology
Hydration
Body fluid compartments
Movement of water between body compartments
Renal clearance
Glomerular filtration
TF/Px ratio and TF/Pinulin
Measuring renal plasma flow and renal blood flow
Regulation of renal blood flow
Tubular reabsorption and secretion
Tubular secretion of PAH
Tubular reabsorption of glucose
Urea recycling
Tubular reabsorption and secretion of weak acids and bases
Proximal convoluted tubule
Loop of Henle
Distal convoluted tubule
Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
Sodium homeostasis
Potassium homeostasis
Phosphate, calcium and magnesium homeostasis
Osmoregulation
Antidiuretic hormone
Kidney countercurrent multiplication
Free water clearance
Physiologic pH and buffers
Buffering and Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
The role of the kidney in acid-base balance
Acid-base map and compensatory mechanisms
Respiratory acidosis
Metabolic acidosis
Plasma anion gap
Respiratory alkalosis
Metabolic alkalosis
Vitamin D
Erythropoietin
Renal agenesis
Horseshoe kidney
Potter sequence
Hyperphosphatemia
Hypophosphatemia
Hypernatremia
Hyponatremia
Hypermagnesemia
Hypomagnesemia
Hyperkalemia
Hypokalemia
Hypercalcemia
Hypocalcemia
Renal tubular acidosis
Minimal change disease
Diabetic nephropathy
Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (NORD)
Amyloidosis
Membranous nephropathy
Lupus nephritis
Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
Poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis
Goodpasture syndrome
Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis
IgA nephropathy (NORD)
Alport syndrome
Kidney stones
Hydronephrosis
Acute pyelonephritis
Chronic pyelonephritis
Prerenal azotemia
Renal azotemia
Acute tubular necrosis
Postrenal azotemia
Renal papillary necrosis
Renal cortical necrosis
Chronic kidney disease
Polycystic kidney disease
Multicystic dysplastic kidney
Medullary cystic kidney disease
Medullary sponge kidney
Renal artery stenosis
Renal cell carcinoma
Angiomyolipoma
Nephroblastoma (Wilms tumor)
WAGR syndrome
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome

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With hypomagnesemia, ‘hypo-’ means ‘lower’ and ‘-magnes-’ refers to magnesium, and -emia refers to the blood, so hypomagnesemia means lower than normal magnesium levels in the blood, and symptoms typically develop at a level below 1 mEq/L.

An average adult has about 25 grams of magnesium in their body. About half is stored in the bones, and most of the other half is found within cells.

In fact, magnesium is a really common positively charged ion found within the cell, second only to potassium.

A very tiny fraction, roughly 1% of the total magnesium in the body, is in the extracellular space which includes both the intravascular space - the blood vessels and lymphatic vessels, and the interstitial space - the space between cells.

About 20% of the magnesium in the extracellular space, which would be about 0.2% of the total magnesium, is bound to negatively charged proteins like albumin, but the other 80% or 0.8% of the total magnesium, can be filtered into the kidneys.

So inside the kidney, that magnesium gets filtered into the nephron, and about 30% gets reabsorbed at the proximal convoluted tubule, 60% gets reabsorbed in the ascending loop of Henle, and 5% get reabsorbed at the distal convoluted tubule. And that leaves only 5% to get excreted by the kidneys.

Magnesium levels can fall in a few situations. One scenario is when the nephron fails to reabsorb the magnesium that’s filtered out of the blood, which would mean more would be excreted in the urine instead of kept in the blood.

Magnesium reabsorption is mostly a passive process where the positively charged magnesium ion follows the electrochemical gradient and moves from the positively charged lumen into the cells lining the lumen which usually have a negative charge.

Now, loop and thiazide diuretics can disrupt that process, because they both make the lumen less positively charged, and this diminishes magnesium’s electrochemical gradient and causing more of the ions to stick around in the filtrate and get peed out.

Another sort of similar scenario is a genetic mutation affecting channels that regulate ion flow, which again could change the electrochemical gradient and cause more magnesium to stick around in the lumen and get peed out.

An example of this is Gitelman syndrome, where there’s a mutation in the gene coding for the Na-Cl cotransporters in the distal tubule.

Now, a different mechanism for hypomagnesemia is prolonged malnutrition, and not enough magnesium gets consumed.

Alternatively, there may be enough consumed, but not enough absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract, so instead of going into the blood it gets excreted, and this could happen because of interference from medications like proton pump inhibitors or from a bout of diarrhea.

Another cause of hypomagnesemia includes uncontrolled diabetes mellitus, where sometimes there can be increased levels of glucose in the blood. And this means that there’s also increased glucose filtered into the kidney and nephron, which ends up attracting a lot of water and causes a large volume of urine to flow through the nephrons. This high flow carries ions like magnesium right through the nephron because the fast flow doesn’t allow enough time for magnesium reabsorption to happen.

Yet another cause is hungry bone syndrome which is when the thyroid or the parathyroid glands are surgically removed, which leads to increased bone formation.

In this case, the osteoblasts, or bone-forming cells, are literally hungry for ions to make more mineralised matrix, and it consumes the magnesium in the blood.

Another one is alcoholism offers a mixed picture, because often these individuals have a poor diet which means there might be low magnesium intake, but in addition, alcohol increases renal excretion of magnesium.

Sources

  1. "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
  2. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Twentieth Edition (Vol.1 & Vol.2)" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  3. "Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine 8E" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  4. "CURRENT Medical Diagnosis and Treatment 2020" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2019)
  5. "Genetic causes of hypomagnesemia, a clinical overview" Pediatric Nephrology (2016)
  6. "Physiology and pathophysiology of the calcium-sensing receptor in the kidney" American Journal of Physiology-Renal Physiology (2010)
  7. "Cellular magnesium homeostasis" Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics (2011)