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Journal Article

Citation

Wang R, He M, Xu J. Nutrients 2022; 14(19): e4174.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, MDPI Publishing)

DOI

10.3390/nu14194174

PMID

36235826

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Electrolyte disorder is prevalent in traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients. This study is designed to explore the association between initial serum magnesium levels and mortality of TBI patients.

METHODS: TBI patients recorded in the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care-III database were screened for this study. Logistic regression analysis was used to explore risk factors for mortality of included TBI patients. The restricted cubic spline (RCS) was applied to fit the correlation between initial serum magnesium level and mortality of TBI.

RESULTS: The 30-day mortality of included TBI patients was 17.0%. Patients with first-tertile and third-tertile serum magnesium levels had higher mortality than those of the second tertile. Univariate regression analysis showed that the serum magnesium level was not associated with mortality. Unadjusted RCS indicated the relationship between serum magnesium level mortality was U-shaped. After adjusting confounding effects, multivariate regression analysis presented that serum magnesium level was positively associated with mortality.

CONCLUSION: TBI patients with abnormally low or high levels of serum magnesium both have a higher incidence of mortality. At the same time, a higher initial serum magnesium level is independently associated with mortality in TBI patients. Physicians should pay attention to the clinical management of TBI patients, especially those with higher serum magnesium levels.


Language: en

Keywords

prognosis; traumatic brain injury; hypermagnesemia; magnesium; risk factor

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