Article
Relation of urinary calcium and magnesium excretion to blood pressure: The International Study Of Macro- And Micro-nutrients And Blood Pressure and The International Cooperative Study On Salt, Other Factors, And Blood Pressure.
Central Laboratory, Akademisch Ziekenhuis St. Rafael, Leuven, Belgium.
American journal of epidemiology (impact factor:
5.59).
07/2011;
174(1):44-51.
DOI:10.1093/aje/kwr049
pp.44-51
Source: PubMed
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Citations (0)
- Cited In (1)
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Article: Urinary and plasma magnesium and risk of ischemic heart disease.
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Previous studies on dietary magnesium and risk of ischemic heart disease (IHD) have yielded inconsistent results, in part because of a lack of direct measures of actual magnesium uptake. Urinary excretion of magnesium, an indicator of dietary magnesium uptake, might provide more consistent results. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to investigate whether urinary magnesium excretion and plasma magnesium are associated with IHD risk. DESIGN: We examined 7664 adult participants free of known cardiovascular disease in the Prevention of Renal and Vascular End-Stage Disease (PREVEND) study-a prospective population-based cohort study. Urinary magnesium excretion was measured in 2 baseline 24-h urine collections. RESULTS: Mean ± SD urinary magnesium excretion was 4.24 ± 1.65 mmol/24 h for men and 3.54 ± 1.40 mmol/24 h for women. During a median follow-up of 10.5 y (IQR: 9.9-10.8 y), 462 fatal and nonfatal IHD events occurred. After multivariable adjustment, urinary magnesium excretion had a nonlinear relation with IHD risk (P-curvature = 0.01). The lowest sex-specific quintile (men: <2.93 mmol/24 h; women: <2.45 mmol/24 h) had an increased risk of fatal and nonfatal IHD (multivariable HR: 1.60; 95% CI: 1.28, 2.00) compared with the upper 4 quintiles of urinary magnesium excretion. A similar increase in risk of the lowest quintile was observed for mortality related to IHD (HR: 1.70; 95% CI: 1.10, 2.61). No associations were observed between circulating magnesium and risk of IHD. CONCLUSIONS: Low urinary magnesium excretion was independently associated with a higher risk of IHD incidence. An increased dietary intake of magnesium, particularly in those with the lowest urinary magnesium, could reduce the risk of IHD.American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 03/2013; 97(6):1299. · 6.67 Impact Factor
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Keywords
17 population samples
24-hour dietary
24-hour excretion
alcohol intake
altered calcium homoeostasis
calcium excretion
calcium intake
dietary calcium
higher urinary calcium excretion
INTERSALT analyses
inverse association
magnesium excretion
multiple confounders
multiple linear regression analyses
Qualitatively similar associations
systolic BP
United States
urinary calcium
urinary calcium excretion
urinary potassium intake