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Journal ArticleDOI

Low serum magnesium levels and metabolic syndrome.

F. Guerrero-Romero, +1 more
- 01 Dec 2002 - 
- Vol. 39, Iss: 4, pp 209-213
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TLDR
A cross-sectional population-based study reveals a strong relationship between decreased serum magnesium and MS and among the components of MS, dyslipidemia and HBP were strongly related to low serum magnesium levels.
Abstract
Low serum magnesium levels are related to diabetes mellitus (DM) and high blood pressure (HBP), but as far as we know, there are no previous reports that analyzed the serum magnesium concentration in individuals with metabolic syndrome (MS). We performed a cross-sectional population-based study to compare 192 individuals with MS and 384 disorder-free control subjects, matched by age and gender. Magnesium supplementation treatment and conditions likely to provoke hypomagnesemia, including previous diagnosis of diabetes mellitus (DM) and/or high blood pressure (HBP), were exclusion criteria. In this regard, only incident cases of DM and HBP were included. MS was defined by the presence at least of two of the following features: hyperglycemia (≥7.0 mmol/l); HBP (≥160/90 mmHg); dyslipidemia (fasting triglycerides ≥1.7 mmol/l and/or HDLcholesterol <1.0 mmol/l); and obesity (body mass index ≥30 kg/m2 and/or waist-to-hip ratio ≥0.85 in women or ≥0.9 in men). Low serum magnesium levels were identified in 126 (65.6%) and 19 (4.9%) individuals with and without MS, p<0.00001. The mean serum magnesium level among subjects with MS was 1.8±0.3 mg/dl, and among control subjects 2.2±0.2 mg/dl, p<0.00001. There was a strong independent relationship between low serum magnesium levels and MS (odds ratio (OR)=6.8, CI95% 4.2–10.9). Among the components of MS, dyslipidemia (OR 2.8, CI95% 1.3–2.9) and HBP (OR 1.9, CI95% 1.4–2.8) were strongly related to low serum magnesium levels. This study reveals a strong relationship between decreased serum magnesium and MS.

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Citations
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Dissertation

A Study of Fasting Serum Magnesium Level in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and Correlation with its Complications

TL;DR: Estimating prevalence of hypomagnesemia in patients with type 2 diabetes and correlate serum magnesium concentrations with micro and macro vascular complications of diabetes and finding low serum magnesium is a strong, independent predictor of development of type 1 diabetes is considered significant.

Dietary magnesium intake and risk of metabolic syndrome: a metaanalysis

TL;DR: He et al. as mentioned in this paper conducted a meta-analysis to estimate the association between dietary magnesium intake and risk of metabolic syndrome by combining the relevant published articles using metaanalysis and found that dietary magnesium consumption is inversely associated with the prevalence of metabolic disorders.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: That low dietary magnesium intake does not confer risk for type 2 diabetes implies that compartmentalization and renal handling of magnesium may be important in the relationship between low serum magnesium levels and the risk forType 2 diabetes.
Journal ArticleDOI

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