The causes of magnesium depletion and hypomagnesemia are decreased gastrointestinal (GI) absorption and increased renal loss. Decreased GI absorption is frequently due to diarrhea, malabsorption, and inadequate dietary intake. Common causes of excessive urinary loss are diuresis due to alcohol, glycosuria, and loop diuretics.
Medical conditions putting persons at high risk for hypomagnesemia are alcoholism, congestive heart failure, diabetes, chronic diarrhea, hypokalemia, hypocalcemia, and malnutrition (strength of recommendation: C, based on expert opinion, physiology, and case series). Evidence suggests that magnesium deficiency is both more common and more clinically significant than generally appreciated.
Evidence summary
Prevalence and incidence. In general, studies are limited by variations in analytic techniques and differences in defining the lower limit for normal serum magnesium.1 Estimates of the prevalence of hypomagnesemia in the general population range from 2.5% to 15%. A study of 11,000 white urban Americans aged 45 to 64 years (probability sampling) found 2.5% with magnesium <0.7 mmol/L and 5% with magnesium <0.75 mmol/L; rates for 4000 African Americans were twice as high.2
Some authors have proposed a higher range for normal serum magnesium, asserting that dietary magnesium deficiency is endemic in developed countries where acid rain reduces the magnesium content of crops and food processing causes further large reductions in the magnesium content of the diet.1 Moreover, common diseases are associated with hypomagnesemia and likely contaminate studies of “normal” populations. Thus, a study of 16,000 German subjects (including blood donors, outpatients, and children) found a 14.5% prevalence of hypomagnesemia using a lower limit of 0.76 mmol/L1; however, applying the more commonly cited lower limit of 0.70 mmol/L (1.7 mg/dL) to the same data yielded aprevalence of 2%.
Numerous studies agree that the prevalence of hypomagnesemia is much higher (10%–65%) in subpopulations defined by severity of illness (hospitalization, in intensive care unit [ICU] or pediatric ICU), increasing age (elderly/in nursing home), or specific diseases. For example, of 94 consecutive patients admitted to the ICU, 65% had hypomagnesemia.3 Likewise, for 127 consecutive patients admitted with a diagnosis of alcoholism, the prevalence was 30%.4
Because of limitations noted above, as well as the lack of control groups, the relative prevalence in these groups (compared with the general population) is uncertain, but the studies do identify high-risk populations. A single study, which included a control group, demonstrated an 11% prevalence of hypomagnesemia among 621 randomly selected hospitalized patients compared with 2.5% among 341 hospital employees.5 Other diseases associated with a high prevalence of hypomagnesemia include cardiovascular disease (hypertension, congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease), diabetes, diarrhea, diuretics use, hypokalemia, hypocalcemia, and malabsorption.6-9
Common causes. We found no high-quality studies to establish the relative probabilities of various causes in the general population or any subpopulation.10 The most common causes of significant hypomagnesemia in developed countries are said to be diabetes, alcoholism, and the use of diuretics. In a group of 5100 consecutive patients (predominantly outpatient, middle-aged, and female) presenting to a diagnostic lab, the most common diagnoses associated with hypomagnesemia were diabetes (20% of cases) and diuretic use (14% of cases); however, other potential causes, including alcoholism, were not identified.11 A complete list of causes is in the Table.
Serious causes. A critical serum magnesium level is less than 0.5 mmol/L and is associated with seizures and life-threatening arrhythmias.6 Very low magnesium levels typically result when an acute problem is superimposed on chronic depletion. For example, critical levels can occur among patients with diabetes during correction of ketoacidosis or alcoholics who develop vomiting, diarrhea, or pancreatitis.
Magnesium in the 0.5 to 0.7 mmol/L range may be life-threatening in certain disease contexts, such as acute myocardial infarction or congestive heart failure, where there is already a risk of fatal arrhythmia.8