Predictive value of serum ionized but not total magnesium levels in head injuries. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Despite a wealth of recent literature and research on traumatic brain injury, very little has been applicable to diagnosing and treating this syndrome at a tissue level. Part of this problem is the inability to assess rapidly and early in the syndrome the degree or progression of brain injury at a tissue level using simple biochemical analytes. With this in mind, we designed a study in 66 human subjects, who presented with acute blunt head trauma, to determine whether free, ionized serum magnesium (IMg2+) and/or free, ionized serum calcium (ICa2+) levels correlated with the severity of head trauma (HT) and whether any predictive reliable patterns emerge. By using a new ion-selective electrode (ISE) for IMg2+, we have been able to determine IMg2+ and ICa2+ within minutes after sampling in the serum of patients early (1-8 h) after HT. These studies reveal that acute HT is associated with graded deficits (up to 62%, mean = 25%) in serum IMg2+, but not in total serum Mg, which are related to severity of injury based on CT scans and other diagnostic parameters. The greater the degree of injury, the greater the ICa2+/IMg2+ ratio. These ionic findings are compatible with the idea that early ischaemia after head trauma may be important in determining neurological outcome. Our findings provide the first evidence for divalent cation changes in blood after traumatic brain injury, which could be of both diagnostic and prognostic value in patients with traumatic brain injury.

publication date

  • December 1, 1995

Research

keywords

  • Calcium
  • Craniocerebral Trauma
  • Magnesium

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0029618297

PubMed ID

  • 8903837

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 55

issue

  • 8