The impact of hypomagnesemia on erectile dysfucntion in elderly, non-diabetic mild to moderate chronic kidney disease patients: a prospective cross sectional study
Abstract
Background: Erectile dysfunction (ED) is common in older men with chronic kidney disease.
Magnesium is essential for metabolism of nitric oxide which helps in penile erection. There is little
information available about the influence of serum magnesium on ED. The aim of the study was
to assess the influence of hypomagnesemia on ED in elderly chronic kidney disease patients.
Subjects and methods: A total of 372 patients aged 65–85 years, with an estimated glomerular filtration rate of 60–15 mL/min/1.73 m2
, were divided into two groups according to serum
magnesium levels: hypomagnesemia, n=180; and normomagnesemia, n=192. ED was assessed
through the International Index of Erectile Function-5. Hypomagnesemia is defined as serum
magnesium ,1.8 mg/dL.
Results: The prevalence of ED was higher among hypomagnesemic subjects compared to
that among normomagnesemics (93.3% vs 70.8%, P,0.001). Severe ED (62.8% vs 43.8%,
P=0.037), mild-to-moderate ED (12.2% vs 5.2%, P=0.016), abdominal obesity (37.2% vs
22.9%, P=0.003), metabolic syndrome (38.4% vs 19.2%, P=0.026), proteinuria (0.83±0.68
vs 0.69±0.48 mg/dL, P=0.023), and C-reactive protein (6.1±4.9 vs 4.1±3.6 mg/L, P,0.001)
were high; high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (48.8±14.0 vs 52.6±13.5 mg/dL, P=0.009), and
albumin (4.02±0.53 vs 4.18±0.38 g/dL, P=0.001) were low in the hypomagnesemia group. Serum
magnesium #1.85 mg/dL was the best cutoff point for prediction of ED. Hypomagnesemia
(relative risk [RR] 2.27), age $70 (RR 1.74), proteinuria (RR 1.80), smoking (RR 21.12),
C-reactive protein (RR 1.34), abdominal obesity (RR 3.92), and hypertension (RR 2.14) were
predictors of ED.
Conclusion: Our data support that ED is related to hypomagnesemia in elderly patients with
moderately to severely reduced kidney function