Increased erythrocyte magnesium content in essential hypertension

Abstract
The present study aimed at testing the hypothesis of decreased erythrocyte magnesium content and magnesium deficiency in essential hypertension. Atomic absorption was used to measure the erythrocyte content of total magnesium in 50-year-old otherwise healthy white males with essential hypertension (n=12, blood pressure (mean±SE) 155±4/109±2 mmHg) that had never been treated and in normotensive control subjects (n=12, blood pressure 128±2/88±1 mmHg) matched for age, sex, race, height, weight and smoking habits. The erythrocyte magnesium content was significantly increased in the hypertensive group (2.266±0.063 usl.903±0.069mmol/l erythrocytes, p<0.001). No significant difference between the groups was detected for serum concentration or the 24-h urinary excretion of magnesium. In conclusion, the present study indicates increased rather than decreased erythrocyte content of magnesium in 50-year-old white males with ‘never-treated’, essential hypertension. Magnesium deficiency is, therefore, unlikely in this subset of critically selected and matched hypertensive patients.