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magnesium (Mg+2) in 24 hour urine

Indications: - evaluation of hypomagnesemia Reference values: - 5.1-80 mg/24 hours (10.3-159.9 MEQ/24 hours) Principle: About 40 per cent of the average adult daily dietary intake of magnesium (300 mg) is absorbed in the small intestine & excreted in the urine. The absorption process appears to be poorly controlled, & homeostasis is maintained largely by renal excretion, which is regulated by tubular reabsorption. The ACA magnesium method is a modification of the methylthymol blue (MTB) complexometric procedure. MTB forms a blue complex with magnesium. Calcium ilnterference is minimized by forming a complex between calcium & Ba-EGTA (chelating agent). The amount of MG-MTB complex formed is proportional to the magnesium concentration & is measured using a two-filter (600-510 nm) end-point technique. Clinical significance: Magnesium depletion is clinically more significant & frequent than an excess, with a prevalence of 11 per cent in hospitalized patients. Signs & symptoms of magnesium depletion do not usually appear until extracellular levels have fallen to 1 MEQ/L or less. Manifestations of significant magnesium depletion include weakness, muscle fasciculations, depression, agitation, seizures, hypocalcemia, hypokalemia, & cardiac arrhythmias. Cause for symptomatic hypomagnesemia include malabsorption, severe diarrhea, nasogastric suction with administration of magnesium-free parenteral fluids, alcoholism, acute pancreatitis, early chronic renal disease, malnutrition, excessive lactation, chronic dialysis, digitalis intoxication, hyperparathyroidism, hypoparathyroidism, hyperaldosteronism, diabetes mellitus, diuretic therapy & porphyria with inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. Increases: - alcohol intoxication - Bartter's syndrome - pharmaceuticals - diuretics - corticosteroids - cisplatin Decreases: - magnesium deficiency Specimen: 2 mL aliquot of a 24-hour urine collection. Proper 24 hour urine collection procedureshould be followed, & collection container should be refrigerated at 2-6 C during collection. Upon receipt in the work area, it should be well-mixed & measured in a graduated cylinder. The total volume should be recorded. Acidify patient samples with 1 part concentrated HCL to 100 parts of urine prior to analysis. Centrifuge if a precipitate forms.

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Mg+2

General

24 hour urine magnesium (Mg+2) in timed urine

References

  1. Kaplan, Lawrence A. & Pesce, Amadeo J., Clinical Chemistry: Theory, Analysis, & Correlation, 2nd Edition, The C.V. Mosby Company, St. Louis, MO, 1989, pp. 875-879.
  2. Henry, John Bernard, M.D., Clinical Diagnosis & Management by Laboratory Methods, 18th Edition, W.B. Saunders Company, Philadelphia, PA, 1991, pp. 165-166.
  3. ACA IV Discrete Clinical Chemistry Analyzer Instrument Manual, Volume 3A, Chapter 6: Test Methodology, MG 8.
  4. Clinical Guide to Laboratory Tests, 4th edition, HB Wu ed, WB Saunders, Philadelphia, 2006
  5. Panel of 8 tests Laboratory Test Directory ARUP: 20477
  6. Panel of 29 tests Laboratory Test Directory ARUP: 20805