Does low magnesium make your blood sugar rise after a kidney transplant?
Hypomagnesemia, insulin secretion and action in patients without diabetes, 1 year after kidney transplantation
Not medical advice. For informational purposes only. Always consult a healthcare professional. Terms
Not medical advice. For informational purposes only. Always consult a healthcare professional. Terms
Publication
Journal
Frontiers in Medicine
Year
2025
Authors
Rasmus K. Carlsen, Anders Åsberg, M. Svensson, K. Birkeland, H. S. Jørgensen, Iain Bressendorff, H. Gulseth, K. Midtvedt, E. Nordheim, T. Jenssen
Related Content
Claims (4)
Older people who've had a kidney transplant and don't have enough magnesium in their blood are more likely to develop diabetes afterward.
People who've had a kidney transplant with lower magnesium in their blood tend to have higher levels of the anti-rejection drug tacrolimus and better kidney function, according to this observation.
People who've had a kidney transplant and have low magnesium in their blood tend to have higher blood sugar levels than those with normal magnesium levels, which might mean magnesium plays a role in how the body manages sugar.
In people who’ve had a kidney transplant, the amount of magnesium in their blood doesn’t seem to affect how well their body uses insulin to manage blood sugar.