Standard serum magnesium tests measure less than 1% of the body’s total magnesium stores and may fail to detect subclinical deficiency that affects nearly half of adults, according to new research challenging decades of clinical practice. The NAKO-MRI study of 9,568 participants found essentially no correlation between blood magnesium levels and a comprehensive clinical depletion score that accurately predicted metabolic and cardiac complications.
Magnesium assessment methods and their limitations
Percentage of total body magnesium detected by different testing approaches
Source: de Baaij et al., Physiological Reviews, 2015 | Georgian Medical Journal News
Blood magnesium maintained by depleting internal stores
Serum magnesium levels are tightly regulated within a narrow range of 0.75-0.95 mmol/L through mobilization from bone and intracellular compartments, according to research published by de Baaij and colleagues in Physiological Reviews. This homeostatic mechanism means blood levels can appear normal even when body stores are significantly depleted.
“A normal serum magnesium result rules out overt clinical deficiency but does not assess whether stores are adequate,” the researchers noted. The current reference intervals were established from NHANES I population data in 1974 based on statistical distribution rather than clinical outcomes, and have not been revised in five decades.
Clinical depletion score outperforms blood tests
The NAKO-MRI study developed a Magnesium Depletion Score based on estimated glomerular filtration rate, proton pump inhibitor use, diuretic use, and alcohol intake. This clinical index successfully predicted metabolic syndrome and cardiac remodeling, while serum magnesium levels showed no such associations, according to findings published by Shugaa Addin et al. in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
Research by Costello and colleagues in Advances in Nutrition confirms that approximately 48% of US adults consume magnesium below the Estimated Average Requirement. This widespread dietary insufficiency may not be detected by routine blood testing, potentially missing opportunities for early intervention.
Alternative biomarkers show limited validation
Red blood cell magnesium and ionized magnesium tests have been proposed as alternatives to serum measurement, but research published in Annals of Medicine indicates these biomarkers have not been adequately validated to distinguish between clinical deficiency and subclinical insufficiency in outpatient populations.
Studies by Gullestad and colleagues in Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation found that while RBC magnesium may better reflect intracellular stores, standardization and reference ranges remain problematic across different laboratory methods.
In a study of 9,568 participants, serum magnesium showed essentially no correlation with clinical depletion scores that successfully predicted metabolic syndrome and cardiac complications
— Dr. Shugaa Addin, NAKO-MRI Study Team (Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2026)
Key takeaways
- Standard serum magnesium tests measure less than 1% of total body magnesium stores and may miss subclinical deficiency
- Clinical depletion scores based on kidney function, medication use, and alcohol intake better predict health outcomes than blood tests
- Nearly half of US adults consume insufficient magnesium, yet blood levels may appear normal due to mobilization from bone and cellular stores
Frequently asked questions
Why doesn’t serum magnesium reflect true body stores?
Serum magnesium represents less than 1% of total body magnesium and is tightly regulated by the body’s homeostatic mechanisms. When dietary intake is insufficient, magnesium is mobilized from bone and intracellular compartments to maintain normal blood levels, potentially masking deficiency.
What factors increase risk of magnesium depletion?
Key risk factors include reduced kidney function, long-term proton pump inhibitor use, diuretic medications, and excessive alcohol consumption. The NAKO-MRI study found these clinical factors better predicted health complications than blood magnesium levels.
Are there better tests than serum magnesium available?
Red blood cell magnesium and ionized magnesium have been proposed as alternatives, but current research indicates these biomarkers lack adequate validation to reliably distinguish clinical deficiency from subclinical insufficiency in routine practice.
The findings suggest clinicians may need to rely more heavily on clinical assessment of depletion risk factors rather than serum magnesium levels alone when evaluating patients for potential magnesium insufficiency. As research continues to validate better biomarkers, the integration of dietary assessment, medication review, and clinical scoring systems may provide more accurate evaluation of magnesium status than traditional blood testing approaches.
Source: Serum magnesium measures less than 1% of total body magnesium

