Another mag thread
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Another mag thread
So, I visited my GI doctor again on a follow-up appointment. He wanted to do some blood work since I told him the budesonide wasn't working for me. I also mentioned I've been having muscle tremors and fasiculations ever since my LC diagnosis (which he didn't really seemed concerned about.) I had asked if he was aware of any GI-Neuro issues that he was aware of. Anyways, my BMP came back with Alk phos below normal limits. I wasn't aware of the causes of that and when I looked up my references - lo and behold! Low magnesium. Imagine that. I've been supplementing it for about 3 weeks now, slowly titrating up so I don't get MORE diarrhea than I've been having.
Community pharmacist
Bearcat,
Thanks for the insight. I wasn't aware that magnesium deficiency could be seen in liver enzyme test results. That's definitely good information to keep in mind.
Tex
Thanks for the insight. I wasn't aware that magnesium deficiency could be seen in liver enzyme test results. That's definitely good information to keep in mind.
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
I don't think it's a common lab value. Low alk phos usually is indicative of malnutrition, vitamin and mineral deficiencies.tex wrote:Bearcat,
Thanks for the insight. I wasn't aware that magnesium deficiency could be seen in liver enzyme test results. That's definitely good information to keep in mind.
Tex
The causes for low serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity (reference range 30-115 U/L) in a large Veterans Medical Center were reviewed. Of 69,864 ALP determinations made over a 4-year period, 130 were low (< 30 U/L, 0.19%), representing 88 individual patients. Of these, 83 (primarily men, 96%) patients' charts were reviewed and classified into two groups, those with and those without conditions previously reported to be associated with decreased serum ALP activity: 47% had conditions associated with low ALP activity, the most frequent being cardiac surgery and cardiopulmonary bypass (26.5%), malnutrition (12.0%), magnesium deficiency (4.8%), hypothyroidism (2.4%), and severe anemia (1.2%)
Community pharmacist