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J Intensive Care Med · Nov 2019
Observational StudyEffectiveness and Safety of Magnesium Replacement in Critically Ill Patients Admitted to the Medical Intensive Care Unit in an Academic Medical Center: A Retrospective, Cohort Study.
- Drayton A Hammond, Jelena Stojakovic, Niranjan Kathe, Julie Tran, Oktawia A Clem, Kristina Erbach, and Jarrod King.
- Department of Pharmacy, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
- J Intensive Care Med. 2019 Nov 1; 34 (11-12): 967-972.
Background"Rules of thumb" for the replacement of electrolytes, including magnesium, in critical care settings are used, despite minimal empirical validation of their ability to achieve a target serum concentration. This study's purpose was to evaluate the effectiveness and safety surrounding magnesium replacement in medically, critically ill patients with mild-to-moderate hypomagnesemia.MethodsThis was a single-center, retrospective, observational evaluation of episodes of intravenous magnesium replacement ordered for patients with mild-to-moderate hypomagnesemia (1.0-1.9 mEq/L) admitted to a medical intensive care unit from May 2014 to April 2016. The primary effectiveness outcome, achievement of target serum magnesium concentration (≥2 mEq/L) compared to expected achievement using a "rule of thumb" estimation that 1 g intravenous magnesium sulfate raises the magnesium concentration 0.15 mEq/L, was tested using 1-sample z test. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to assess the effect of infusion rate on target achievement.ResultsOf 152 days on which magnesium replacements were provided for 72 patients, a follow-up serum magnesium concentration was checked within 24 hours in 89 (58.6%) episodes. Of these 89 episodes, serum magnesium concentration reached target in only 49 (59.8%) episodes compared to an expected 89 (100%; P < .0001). There was no significant association between infusion rate and achievement of the target serum magnesium concentration (odds ratio: 0.962, 95% confidence interval: 0.411-2.256).ConclusionsMedically, critically ill patients who received nonprotocolized magnesium replacement achieved the target serum magnesium concentration less frequently than the "rule of thumb" estimation predicted.
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