Hypermagnesemia
Anesthesia Implications
Anesthesia Implications
Emergency treatment – IV calcium and/or hemodialysis.
Altered hemodynamics – Arterial and/or central lines are recommended where the patient is severely hypotensive and/or in need of aggressive fluid resuscitation.
Avoid acidosis – acidosis will exacerbate hypermagnesemia
NMB sensitive – Hypermagnesemia will prolong neuromuscular blockade. Some recommend reducing the dose 25-50%. Use TOF to guide NMB doses.
Pathophysiology
Definition – Hypermagnesemia is defined as a serum magnesium of greater than 2.5 mEq/L
Etiology – primarily caused by magnesium supplementation (eg. IV administered magnesium, antacids, magnesium-based enemas, or cathartics). Poor renal function is a common comorbidity when the cause is supplementation. Other less common causes can include hypothyroidism, rhabdomyolysis, lithium supplementation, hyperparathyroidism, and addison’s disease (adrenal insufficiency).
Diagnosis – creatinine clearance (renal function) is typically assessed along with identification of magnesium supplements. Once ruled out, other causes would be investigated (eg. hypothyroidism, lithium supplementation, hyperparathyroidism, and addison’s disease).
Symptoms and magnesium blood levels (mEq/L):
Rare – Much less common than hypomagnesemia. Found primarily in ICU and dialysis patients.
Treatment – acute cases are treated with IV calcium and/or hemodialysis. Less severe cases aim to increase renal excretion by using loop diuretics and saline bolus’. Half percent normal saline with 5% dextrose is the recommended solution.
Ionized – 60% of magnesium in the blood is ionized. This ionized magnesium is responsible for clinical manifestations.
Hines. Stoelting’s anesthesia and co-existing disease. 7th edition. 2018.
Herroeder. Magnesium—Essentials for Anesthesiologists. 2011 link