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Query: UMLS:C0028738 (
nystagmus
)
7,431
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Downbeat nystagmus developed in a 67-year-old hypomagnesemic woman while she was receiving lithium carbonate for depression. This
nystagmus
abated each time lithium carbonate therapy was withdrawn, and no alternative causes of
nystagmus
were demonstrated. However, this
nystagmus
occurred despite serum lithium carbonate levels in the nontoxic range. Total-body
magnesium deficiency
may have enhanced the toxic effect of lithium carbonate on cerebellomedullary connections.
...
PMID:Downbeat nystagmus. Long-term therapy with moderate-dose lithium carbonate. 662 91
Magnesium deficiency
may complicate many diseases. The causes include the following: inadequate intake during starvation or increased requirement during early childhood, pregnancy, or lactation; excessive losses of magnesium as a result of malabsorption from the gastrointestinal tract or from the kidneys during use of diuretics; and to a combination of the two, as in alcoholism. Most often the etiological factors have been operative for a month or more. Acute hypomagnesemia can occur without previous Mg deficiency after epinephrine, cold stress and stress of serious injury or extensive surgery. The clinical manifestations depend on the age of the patient and may begin insidiously or with dramatic suddenness, or there may be no overt symptoms or signs. The manifestations can be divided into the following categories: totally non-specific symptoms and signs ascribable to the primary disease; neuromuscular hyperactivity including tremor, myoclonic jerks, convulsions, Chvostek sign, Trousseau sign (rarely), spontaneous carpopedal spasm (rarely), ataxia,
nystagmus
and dysphagia; psychiatric disturbances from apathy and coma to some of all facets of delirium; cardiac arrhythmias including ventricular fibrillation and sudden death; hypocalcemia which is responsive only to Mg therapy; and hypokalemia which is not easily nor completely corrected without Mg therapy. The diversity of etiologies and the multiplicity of manifestations result in confusion and controversy. The documentation of normal renal function is absolutely necessary for maximum doses. The order of magnitude of dose is 1.0 meq Mg/kg on day 1, and 0.3 to 0.5 mEq/kg per day for 3 to 5 days. In emergencies such as convulsions or ventricular arrhythmias, a bolus injection of 1.0 gm (8.1 meq) of MgSO4 is indicated. Therapy of Mg deficiency in the presence of renal insufficiency requires smaller doses and frequent monitoring. Complete repletion occurs slowly.
...
PMID:Magnesium deficiency. Etiology and clinical spectrum. 702 Mar 47
Hypomagnesemia in childhood is relatively frequently noted in the neonatal period due to maternal causes, such as decreased intake due to vomiting, overuse of laxatives, and neonatal causes such as intrauterine growth retardation, birth asphyxia and exchange transfusion. A very rare cause of neonatal
magnesium deficiency
is called primary hypomagnesemia caused by impaired intestinal absorption of magnesium. Reference values of serum magnesium in cord blood are slightly lowered. Erythrocyte magnesium content is also lowered in cord blood and during the first month after birth. Mononuclear magnesium content shows no differences with age. Renal magnesium loss is diagnosed by the presence of hypomagnesemia with an inappropriately high 24-hour urinary magnesium excretion. In isolated familial hypomagnesemia an autosomal dominant as well as an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance was found. The renal magnesium threshold is lowered in both forms but the tubular maximum is only lowered in the dominant form. In familial hypomagnesemia-hypokalemia (Gitelman syndrome) the renal magnesium threshold is lowered but the tubular maximum is in the normal range. In this syndrome, with probably an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance, the renal defect might be located in the distal nephron after the medullary part of the ascending limb of the loop of Henle. The magnesium content of mononuclear cells and erythrocytes is in the normal and lower normal range, respectively. In the familial hypomagnesemia-hypercalciuria syndrome, hypomagnesemia is always combined with hyperuricemia and nephrocalcinosis. Myopia and horizontal
nystagmus
are often present.
...
PMID:Magnesium metabolism in childhood. 826 18
Magnesium is the second most abundant intracellular cation and is a fundamental cofactor in a multitude of cellular enzymatic reactions.
Magnesium deficiency
causes diverse clinical features predominantly due to cardio- and neurotoxicity. We describe a case of severe hypomagnesaemia associated with intermittent downbeat
nystagmus
, cerebellar ataxia, generalised convulsions and a supraventricular tachycardia. On MRI imaging, a transient lesion of the cerebellar nodulus was observed, which has not, to our knowledge, been previously described in isolated hypomagnesaemia.
...
PMID:Reversible hypomagnesaemia-induced subacute cerebellar syndrome. 2060 40