Comparison of Diabetic Nephropathy Markers in Diabetic Patients With Insomnia Before and After Potassium and Magnesium Supplementation: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Sidra Khalid, Shahid Bashir, Riffat Mehboob, Humaira Waseem, Imran Shahid, Abdullah R. Alzahrani, Uzma Malik, Hani Shalabi, Abdulhadi I Bima, Siti Sarah Maidin, Ragdah Hussain Arif, Hussam M Alim

TL;DR
This study found that magnesium and potassium supplements helped reduce kidney damage markers in diabetic patients with insomnia.
Contribution
The novel finding is that magnesium and potassium supplementation significantly reduces diabetic nephropathy markers in patients with insomnia.
Findings
Magnesium supplementation significantly reduced serum urea, creatinine, and ALT levels.
Combination of magnesium and potassium significantly reduced ALT, AST, and RA factor levels.
The study involved 290 diabetic patients with insomnia, showing positive effects after 60 days of supplementation.
Abstract
Diabetic nephropathy is a common complication in patients with type 2 diabetes, and insomnia may exacerbate renal dysfunction. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of magnesium and potassium supplementation on diabetic nephropathy markers in diabetic patients with insomnia. A single‐blinded randomized controlled trial was conducted on 320 diabetic patients. However, only 290 diabetic patients continued the trial after 60 days follow up. Insomnia was defined by using Insomnia Severity Index (ISI). Supplements dosages were prepared in the form of tablets, characterized as T1; placebo, T2; magnesium (Mg), T3; potassium (K), and T4; as magnesium along with potassium. Serum urea level, serum ALT, serum AST, serum creatinine and HbA1c were quantified in blood (serum) employing a quantitative and highly sensitive enzyme‐labelled immunosorbent assay (ELISA), pre‐and post‐trial. The total…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnesium in Health and Disease · Parathyroid Disorders and Treatments · Potassium and Related Disorders
