Title of article
Correlation between Serum Magnesium and Lactate Levels at the Time of ICU Admission and Early Phase of Sepsis
Author/Authors
Assarian ، Amin - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Noormandi ، Afsaneh - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Khalili ، Hossein - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Mohammadi ، Mostafa - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Abdollahi ، Alireza - Tehran University of Medical Sciences
Pages
5
From page
86
To page
90
Abstract
Background: As the fourth abundant electrolyte in the body, magnesium has critical roles in aerobic metabolism and regulation of the immune system. Few studies investigate the association between magnesium status of critically ill septic patients and lactate acidosis in the intensive care unit (ICU). In this study, serum magnesium level and lactate level were evaluated at both admission time and time of sepsis. #xD; Methods: This was a prospective, crosssectional study conducted at general ICU of a tertiary referral teaching hospital. Hypomagnesemia was defined as a serum magnesium concentration of less than 1.7 mg/dL. MannWhitney test and independentsample ttest were used to analyze nonparametric and parametric data, respectively. #xD; Results: Of 50 sepsis patients, 32 patients were normomagnesemic, and 18 were hypomagnesemic. Hypomagnesemic patients have significantly higher lactate serum level at the time of sepsis compared to normomagnesemic patients [2.32 (1.963.29) vs. 1.94 (1.802.15) mg/dl respectively, p lt;0.001]. There were significant differences between normomagnesemic and hypomagnesemic septic patients in Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score at sepsis time (9.44 #xB1; 4.33 vs. 11.67 #xB1; 3.83, p=0.46), and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score [3 (3.005.00) vs. 4 (3.756.25), p=0.04]. Also, 28day mortality because of sepsis (50% respectively, p lt;0.001), duration of mechanical ventilation [12.00 (4.0014.25) days respectively, p lt;0.01] and ICU stay [14.00 (12.7517.25) days respectively, p lt;0.01] were significantly higher in hypomagnesemic groups. #xD; Conclusion: Admission hypomagnesemia in sepsis patients may increase serum lactate concentration, duration of ventilation, duration of ICU stay and mortality.
Keywords
Hypomagnesemia , Lactate level , Sepsis , Mortality
Journal title
Archives of Anesthesiology and Critical Care
Serial Year
2019
Journal title
Archives of Anesthesiology and Critical Care
Record number
2455728
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