CMER Center for Magnesium Education and Research, 13-1255 Malama Street, Pahoa, HI, 96778, USA.
, White House, TN, USA.
Eur J Nutr. 2022 Oct;61(7):3697-3706. doi: 10.1007/s00394-022-02916-w. Epub 2022 Jun 10.
Serum magnesium is the most frequently used laboratory test for evaluating clinical magnesium status. Hypomagnesemia (low magnesium status), which is associated with many chronic diseases, is diagnosed using the serum magnesium reference range. Currently, no international consensus for a magnesemia normal range exists. Two independent groups designated 0.85 mmol/L (2.07 mg/dL; 1.7 mEq/L) as the low cut-off point defining hypomagnesemia. MaGNet discussions revealed differences in serum magnesium reference ranges used by members' hospitals and laboratories, presenting an urgent need for standardization.
We gathered and compared serum magnesium reference range values from our institutions, hospitals, and colleagues worldwide.
Serum magnesium levels designating "hypomagnesemia" differ widely. Of 43 collected values, only 2 met 0.85 mmol/L as the low cut-off point to define hypomagnesemia. The remainder had lower cut-off values, which may underestimate hypomagnesemia diagnosis in hospital, clinical, and research assessments. Current serum magnesium reference ranges stem from "normal" populations, which unknowingly include persons with chronic latent magnesium deficit (CLMD). Serum magnesium levels of patients with CLMD fall within widely used "normal" ranges, but their magnesium status is too low for long-term health. The lower serum magnesium reference (0.85 mmol/L) proposed specifically prevents the inclusion of patients with CLMD.
Widely varying serum magnesium reference ranges render our use of this important medical tool imprecise, minimizing impacts of low magnesium status or hypomagnesemia as a marker of disease risk. To appropriately diagnose, increase awareness of, and manage magnesium status, it is critical to standardize lower reference values for serum magnesium at 0.85 mmol/L (2.07 mg/dL; 1.7 mEq/L).
血清镁是评估临床镁状态最常用的实验室检测指标。低镁血症(镁状态低下)与许多慢性疾病有关,其诊断采用血清镁参考范围。目前,尚无国际公认的镁正常范围。两个独立的研究小组将 0.85mmol/L(2.07mg/dL;1.7mEq/L)定为低镁血症的下限切点。MaGNet 讨论揭示了成员医院和实验室使用的血清镁参考范围存在差异,这迫切需要标准化。
我们收集并比较了来自我们机构、医院和世界各地同事的血清镁参考范围值。
表示“低镁血症”的血清镁水平差异很大。在收集的 43 个值中,只有 2 个符合将 0.85mmol/L 作为低切点来定义低镁血症。其余值的切点较低,这可能会低估医院、临床和研究评估中的低镁血症诊断。当前的血清镁参考范围源自“正常”人群,其中不自觉地包括有慢性潜在镁缺乏(CLMD)的人。CLMD 患者的血清镁水平落在广泛使用的“正常”范围内,但他们的镁状态过低,不利于长期健康。建议的较低血清镁参考值(0.85mmol/L)专门防止了 CLMD 患者被纳入。
血清镁参考范围的广泛差异使我们对这一重要医疗工具的使用变得不准确,从而最小化了低镁状态或低镁血症作为疾病风险标志物的影响。为了正确诊断、提高对镁状态的认识并进行管理,将血清镁的下限参考值标准化至 0.85mmol/L(2.07mg/dL;1.7mEq/L)至关重要。