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      Magnesium in chronic kidney disease Stages 3 and 4 and in dialysis patients

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          Abstract

          The kidney has a vital role in magnesium homeostasis and, although the renal handling of magnesium is highly adaptable, this ability deteriorates when renal function declines significantly. In moderate chronic kidney disease (CKD), increases in the fractional excretion of magnesium largely compensate for the loss of glomerular filtration rate to maintain normal serum magnesium levels. However, in more advanced CKD (as creatinine clearance falls <30 mL/min), this compensatory mechanism becomes inadequate such that overt hypermagnesaemia develops frequently in patients with creatinine clearances <10 mL/min. Dietary calcium and magnesium may affect the intestinal uptake of each other, though results are conflicting, and likewise the role of vitamin D on intestinal magnesium absorption is somewhat uncertain. In patients undergoing dialysis, the effect of various magnesium and calcium dialysate concentrations has been investigated in haemodialysis (HD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD). Results generally show that dialysate magnesium, at 0.75 mmol/L, is likely to cause mild hypermagnesaemia, results for a magnesium dialysate concentration of 0.5 mmol/L were less consistent, whereas serum magnesium levels were mostly normal to hypomagnesaemic when 0.2 and 0.25 mmol/L were used. While dialysate magnesium concentration is a major determinant of HD or PD patients’ magnesium balance, other factors such as nutrition and medications (e.g. laxatives or antacids) also play an important role. Also examined in this review is the role of magnesium on parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels in dialysis patients. Although various studies have shown that patients with higher serum magnesium tend to have lower PTH levels, many of these suffer from methodological limitations. Finally, we examine the complex and often conflicting results concerning the interplay between magnesium and bone in uraemic patients. Although the exact role of magnesium in bone metabolism is unclear, it may have both positive and negative effects, and it is uncertain what the optimal magnesium levels are in uraemic patients.

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          Cloning and characterization of an extracellular Ca(2+)-sensing receptor from bovine parathyroid.

          Maintenance of a stable internal environment within complex organisms requires specialized cells that sense changes in the extracellular concentration of specific ions (such as Ca2+). Although the molecular nature of such ion sensors is unknown, parathyroid cells possess a cell surface Ca(2+)-sensing mechanism that also recognizes trivalent and polyvalent cations (such as neomycin) and couples by changes in phosphoinositide turnover and cytosolic Ca2+ to regulation of parathyroid hormone secretion. The latter restores normocalcaemia by acting on kidney and bone. We now report the cloning of complementary DNA encoding an extracellular Ca(2+)-sensing receptor from bovine parathyroid with pharmacological and functional properties nearly identical to those of the native receptor. The novel approximately 120K receptor shares limited similarity with the metabotropic glutamate receptors and features a large extracellular domain, containing clusters of acidic amino-acid residues possibly involved in calcium binding, coupled to a seven-membrane-spanning domain like those in the G-protein-coupled receptor superfamily.
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            Magnesium basics

            As a cofactor in numerous enzymatic reactions, magnesium fulfils various intracellular physiological functions. Thus, imbalance in magnesium status—primarily hypomagnesaemia as it is seen more often than hypermagnesaemia—might result in unwanted neuromuscular, cardiac or nervous disorders. Measuring total serum magnesium is a feasible and affordable way to monitor changes in magnesium status, although it does not necessarily reflect total body magnesium content. The following review focuses on the natural occurrence of magnesium and its physiological function. The absorption and excretion of magnesium as well as hypo- and hypermagnesaemia will be addressed.
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              Reassessment of albumin as a nutritional marker in kidney disease.

              The decision by nephrologists, renal dietitians, federal agencies, health care payers, large dialysis organizations, and the research community to embrace serum albumin as an important index of nutrition and clinical performance is based on numerous misconceptions. Patients with analbuminemia are not malnourished and individuals with simple malnutrition are rarely hypoalbuminemic. With the possible exception of kwashiorkor, a rare nutritional state, serum albumin is an unreliable marker of nutritional status. Furthermore, nutritional supplementation has not been clearly shown to raise levels of serum albumin. The use of serum albumin as a quality care index is also problematic. It has encouraged a reflexive reliance on expensive and unproven interventions such as dietary supplements and may lead to adverse selection of healthier patients by health care providers. The authors offer a rationale for considering albumin as a marker of illness rather than nutrition. Viewed in this manner, hypoalbuminemia may offer an opportunity to improve patient well-being by identifying and treating the underlying disorder.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clin Kidney J
                Clin Kidney J
                ndtplus
                ckj
                Clinical Kidney Journal
                Oxford University Press
                2048-8505
                2048-8513
                February 2012
                February 2012
                : 5
                : Suppl 1 , Magnesium - a versatile and often overlooked element: New perspectives with a focus on chronic kidney disease
                : i39-i51
                Affiliations
                [1 ]UCL Centre for Nephrology Royal Free, University College London Medical School, London, UK
                [2 ]Nephrology Service, IMIBIC, University Hospital Reina Sofia, Cordoba, Spain
                [3 ]Primario Divisione di Nefrologica e Emodialisi-Croff, Milano, Italy
                Author notes
                Correspondence and offprint requests to: John Cunningham; E-mail: j.cunningham@ 123456lonclin.co.uk
                Article
                10.1093/ndtplus/sfr166
                4455820
                26069820
                adae3c74-4303-406a-90b7-cbc826f36287
                © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com

                History
                Page count
                Pages: 13
                Categories
                Articles

                Nephrology
                bone,ckd,haemodialysis,dialysate magnesium,diuretics,magnesium,magnesium supplements,peritoneal dialysis

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