RESUMO
Twenty pre-eclamptic mothers treated with MgSO4 and their newborn infants were studied prospectively to determine the clinical and biochemical effects of hypermagnesemia. Maternal serum magnesium concentration rose to 4.4 mg/dl at delivery and was accompanied by a fall in maternal serum calcium concentration during labor. Neonatal serum Mg concentration remained elevated for the first 72 hours of life (mean at 72 hours = 3.0 mg/dl). Serum Mg concentration was higher in premature infants and in babies with birth asphyxia and/or hypotonia. Serum Ca concentration was higher and serum PTH was lower in hypermagnesemic study infants when compared to a retrospectively selected, matched froup of control infants. We speculate that elevated serum Mg values in these infants result in a shift of Ca from bone to plasma, and that elevated Mg and Ca concentrations further suppress neonatal parathyroid function.