Unraveling the Magnesium Connection: The Cincinnati PPG's Pioneering Work on Mineral Metabolism in Diabetes and Pregnancy

Author:

Mimouni Francis B.1,Khoury Jane C.,Ehrlich Shelley,Rosen Barak2,Sheffer-Mimouni Galit1,Miodovnik Menachem3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics and Research Institute, Leumit Health Services, and the Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

2. Department of Maternal–Fetal Medicine, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey

3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Inova Health System, Falls Church, Virginia

Abstract

This study aimed to review the Cincinnati PPG's contribution to the understanding and treatment of neonatal hypocalcemia (NHC) in infants of diabetic mothers. This study is a retrospective review of the NIH-funded Program Project Grant (PPG) works related to mineral metabolism in type 1 diabetic pregnant women. The PPG investigators first described the epidemiology and the additional risk factors for NHC, namely prematurity and neonatal asphyxia, but also recognized the independent effect of maternal diabetes mellitus. They explored the link between NHC and maternal/neonatal hypomagnesemia. They finally conducted a randomized control trial of prevention of NHC by early administration of magnesium sulfate soon after birth to prevent NHC. The PPG in its various phases has allowed to reveal the important role that magnesium plays in the regulation of mineral metabolism in pregnancy and in particular the pregnancy complicated by pregestational diabetes. Key Points

Funder

Clinical Center

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Reference33 articles.

1. Neonatal hypocalcemia in low birth weight infants;R C Tsang;Pediatrics,1970

2. Hypocalcemia in infants of diabetic mothers. Studies in calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium metabolism and parathormone responsiveness;R C Tsang;J Pediatr,1972

3. Neonatal magnesium disturbances;R C Tsang;Am J Dis Child,1972

4. Magnesium, the mimic/antagonist of calcium;B S Levine;N Engl J Med,1984

5. Mechanisms of hypocalcaemia in the clinical form of severe magnesium deficit in the human;E Leicht;Magnes Res,1992

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