We love magnesium in the Emergency Department. It’s been said that magnesium is second-line for everything (kind of like doxycycline). But what about rate/rhythm control in atrial fibrillation (AF)? The 2014 AHA/ACC/HRS guideline for the management of patients with AF doesn’t mention magnesium at all.1 Dr. Josh Farkas (@PulmCrit) wrote about magnesium infusions for atrial fibrillation and torsade last year. His post looked at its use for cardioversion, rhythm-control, and rate-control in critically-ill patients. Our post will focus specifically on the IV magnesium data for rate-control in ED-related settings.
Over the years, IV magnesium has been studied for the treatment of rapid AF in several clinical situations, most prominently in post-cardiac surgery patients. However, there are also studies in ED and cardiology patients, both as a primary therapy and as an adjunct. In fact, two meta-analyses from 2007 evaluated the data (mostly the same studies).2,3 Both concluded that magnesium is safe and effective in controlling ventricular rate in rapid AF compared to placebo, the latter in patients also receiving digoxin. A closer look at the meta-analyses reveals that the positive rate-control effect for magnesium seems to be driven by the placebo-controlled trials.4 Similarly, the positive benefit of magnesium in rhythm-control is largely derived from trials versus placebo or traditional rate-control medications (e.g., beta-blockers or calcium channel blockers) rather than amiodarone or other rhythm-control agents. Of the 11 studies cited in the meta-analyses, only five reported rate-control data in ED-related settings.
Rate-control with IV magnesium in ED-related settings
Citation | Setting/Design | Comparison | Result |
Chiladakis 20015 | Cardiology department / prospective, randomized |
Diltiazem (n = 23): 25 mg IV over 15 min, then 12.5 mg/h infusion for 6 h Magnesium (n = 23): 2.5 g IV over 15 min, then 7.5 g over 6 h |
Similar efficacy in reducing ventricular rate at 1 hr (P <0.05) |
Davey 20056 | ED / prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled |
Control (n = 97): 100 mL 5% dextrose, IV digoxin at the discretion of treating physician Magnesium (n = 102): 2.5 g over 20 min then 2.5 g over 2 h, IV digoxin at the discretion of treating physician |
Magnesium more likely than placebo to achieve a HR <100 bpm (65% vs 34%, RR 1.89; 95% CI 1.38 to 2.59; P <0.0001) |
Joshi 19957 | ICU / prospective, controlled |
Verapamil (n = 45): 5 mg IV verapamil, repeat if no response after 15 min Magnesium (n = 41): 2 g, repeat if no response after 15 min |
Verapamil more likely to achieve HR <100 bpm (55.6% vs 19.5%) p < 0.0001 |
Hays 19948 | ED / prospective, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled |
Control (n = 8): placebo (not defined), 0.5 mg IV digoxin after first 30 min Magnesium (n = 7): 2 g over 1 min, then 1 g/h for 4 h, IV 0.5 mg digoxin after first 30 min |
At 5 minutes, ventricular rates decreased 16 +/- 7% (P <0.02) with MgSO4; this was comparable to rate-control with digoxin (18 +/- 9%) at 4 hours |
Gullestad 19939 | Unclear / prospective, randomized |
Verapamil (n = 20): Verapamil 5 mg IV over 5 min, repeat 5 mg if no response after 10 min, followed by 0.1 mg/min infusion Magnesium (n = 15): 1.2 g over 5 min, repeat if no response after 10 min, followed by infusion 0.04 mmol (0.01 g)/min |
Verapamil more likely to achieve HR < 100 bpm at 4 hrs (48% vs 28%) p <0.05 |
One ED trial has been published since the meta-analyses.10 Twenty-four patients were randomized in a double-blinded, placebo-controlled fashion to receive either magnesium sulfate 2.5 gm (10 mmol) IV or 0.9% saline over 15 minutes.
- Baseline heart rate (mean +/- standard deviation [SD])
- Saline group: 140 +/- 21 beats/min
- MgSO4 group: 125 +/- 24 beat/min
- Heart rate at 2 hours
- Saline group: 114 +/- 31 beats/min
- MgSO4 group: 116 +/- 30 beats/min
- The heart rate decrease across time did not differ between groups (p=0.124).
A 2018 study further explored the role of magnesium.11 A full analysis of the trial was featured on The PharmERToxGuy blog by Jenny Koehl, PharmD. Briefly, a prospective randomized, controlled, double-blind study in three Tunisian EDs found that 4.5 gm of IV magnesium (when combined with an AV nodal blocking agent) achieved the heart rate outcome better than placebo (64.2% vs 43.6% at 4 hours; 97.9% vs. 83.3% at 24 hours). Two important points, highlighted by The PharmERToxGuy blog, are:
- Greater decreases in heart rate throughout the 24-hour study period were achieved with the addition of magnesium. This is important because it may not be immediately evident during an ED stay if magnesium is helping, especially when using digoxin which takes longer to work (sometimes several hours).
- The most common AV nodal blocking agent in the study was digoxin. This is not reflective of general practice in the U.S. It is encouraging that in patients who received diltiazem or beta blockers, there was not an increased risk of bradycardia or hypotension. We need a study with magnesium + the AV nodal blocking agents used in the U.S.
Dose
Based on the available data, the magnesium dose should be 2-4 gm IV over 15-30 minutes. Repeat boluses or continuous infusions were used in some trials and may be considered. To keep intracellular magnesium levels higher, infusions are theoretically necessary. But, it may not be logistically feasible to maintain a continuous magnesium infusion in the ED, especially considering there is not much available supporting data.
Adverse Effects
The primary adverse effects of IV magnesium administration across the trials were flushing and slight hypotension. All reactions were mild and self-limiting.
Magnesium Deficiency
Hypomagnesemia is often found in patients with rapid AF, but data is conflicting on whether the magnesium level matters.12,13 One study found no difference in magnesium’s effect on heart rate between magnesium deficient and non-deficient patients with rapid AF.
Chronic Atrial Fibrillation
Magnesium does not seem to have an effect on heart rate in patients with chronic AF.14
Bottom Line
Magnesium seems to be safe and moderately effective for reducing heart rate in rapid AF. Even in the studies where magnesium was less effective than an active comparator, it still demonstrated some reduction in HR. Therefore, it seems reasonable to consider administering magnesium 2-4 gm IV as an adjunctive therapy while you are choosing between a calcium channel blocker or beta blocker as the primary rate-control agent. In some cases, you may find magnesium is enough to achieve lenient HR goals (ie, < 110 bpm). Monitor HR and BP appropriately.
Last updated: 8/22/18
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