The relationship between magnesium and ambulatory blood pressure, augmentation index, pulse wave velocity, total peripheral resistance, and cardiac output in essential hypertensive patients

2014 
Abstract Magnesium levels have been shown to be associated with elevated blood pressure (BP), endothelial dysfunction, insulin resistance, vascular calcification, inflammation, and atherosclerosis. It was also demonstrated that patients with hypertension have increased inflammation, insulin resistance, and endothelial dysfunction. However, the relationship between magnesium, ambulatory BPs, and central hemodynamic parameters were not evaluated extensively. Serum magnesium levels, ambulatory blood pressures, augmentation index (Aix), pulse wave velocity, total peripheral resistances, and cardiac output were measured for all patients. In total, 184 essential hypertension patients were enrolled. In univariate analysis, magnesium levels were correlated with hemoglobin (r = +0.155; P = .037), albumin (r = +0.180; P = .018), pulse pressure (daytime; r=−0.170; P = .021), pulse pressure (24-hour; r=−0.156; P = .035), Aix (daytime; r=−0.223; P = .002), Aix (nighttime; r=−0.169; P = .022), and Aix (24-hour; r=−0.247; P = .001). In regression analysis, magnesium levels were independently and conversely associated with daytime Aix ( P P = .019), and 24-hour Aix ( P
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