The Miracle of Magnesium
by Carolyn Dean, MD, ND
Magnesium deficiency triggers or causes the following 22 conditions; the
introduction of magnesium, either by a high-magnesium diet, with green drinks,
or magnesium supplements, can help alleviate these conditions:
- Anxiety and panic attacks
- Asthma
- Blood clots
- Bowel disease
- Cystitis
- Depression
- Detoxification
- Diabetes, Syndrome X, and Metabolic Syndrome
- Fatigue
- Heart disease
- Hypertension
- Hypoglycemia
- Insomnia
- Kidney Disease
- Liver Disease
- Migraine
- Musculoskeletal conditions
- Nerve problems
- Obstetrics and Gynecology
premenstrual syndrome, dysmenorrhea
(cramping pain during menses), infertility, premature contractions,
preeclampsia, and eclampsia in pregnancy, lessens the risk of cerebral
palsy and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
- Osteoporosis
- Raynaud's Syndrome
- Tooth decay
Science and medicine have both turned their backs on magnesium. Science opts
out because the scientific methodology is defined by being able to test one thing
at a time ending up with one result. Science finds magnesium too difficult to
corral, partly because it is responsible for the correct metabolic function of over
350 enzymes in the body. The creation of ATP (adenosine triphospate) the energy
molecules of the body, the action of the heart muscle, the proper formation of
bones and teeth, relaxation of blood vessels, and the promotion of proper
bowel function are all under the guidance of magnesium.
Why Don't We Hear More About Magnesium?
Medicine has turned its back on magnesium because most of the funding for
medical research now comes from drug companies. Magnesium is not a patented drug
and therefore will not be studied by drug companies, except to try to disprove
its action.
While researching my book, "The Miracle of Magnesium," I found that
doctors have been prescribing magnesium for heart disease since the 1930s. A review
of seven major clinical studies showed that IV magnesium reduced the odds of death
by more than half in patients suffering acute myocardial infarction (heart attack).
One study, LIMIT-2, developed a protocol for giving magnesium as soon as possible
after onset of the heart attack and before any other drugs. If those criteria were
followed, heart muscle damage was greatly reduced, and neither hypertension nor
arrhythmia developed.
Magnesium and the Heart
During and after a heart attack, people can suffer the following:
- Extension of the area of heart damage as calcium floods into the muscle
- Blood clotting, which blocks blood vessels in the heart muscle
- Decreased blood flow as blood vessels go into spasm
Arrhythmia as the areas where muscle contraction in the heart originate are damaged
Magnesium is able to:
- Dilate blood vessels
- Prevent spasm in the heart muscle and blood vessel walls
- Counteract the action of calcium, which increases spasm
- Help dissolve blood clots
- Dramatically lessen the site of injury and prevent arrhythmia
- Act as an antioxidant against the free radicals forming at the site of injury 1-4
One of the main reasons that heart drug digoxin becomes toxic is because there is
not enough magnesium in the body. 5
A drug trial called ISIS sought to disprove the effects of magnesium. In the
ISIS trial the protocol was not followed in that magnesium was not the first drug
given, and often it was not given for many hours or days after a heart attack was
well established, causing widespread damage and blood clotting. Yet, drug reps can dutifully
tell their doctor clients that ISIS proved that magnesium is worthless for heart disease! 6
Since the LIMIT-2 and ISIS trials, another smaller trial with only 200 people who were
given IV magnesium at the onset of a heart attack, experienced a 74 percent lower
death rate. 7
In spite of the fact that heart drugs, mainly diuretics, have the bad habit of
depleting magnesium - along with potassium and even though magnesium is absolutely
required for stabilizing heart muscle activity - magnesium is not utilized properly by
conventional medicine.
Magnesium's Role in a Healthy Body
A small group of international magnesium researchers, however, have continued,
against all odds, to prove the importance of magnesium not only as a nutrient for
thousands of body processes but also as a medicine to treat magnesium-depleted
health conditions. Drs. Bella and Burton Altura are two hard-working magnesium
heroes! They have performed laboratory research and clinical research to the tune
of about 1,000 studies over the past 40 years. The Alturas personally confirmed that
the 22 magnesium-related conditions, listed at the beginning of this article, have
a solid basis in science.
Dr. Burton Altura said that during his 40 years of research he was appalled at the
lack of attention given to this life-saving nutrient. He has all but given up on
conventional medicine recognizing the need for magnesium in its protocols for
dozens of diseases and welcomed books such as mine to help spread the word. Without
million-dollar marketing budgets that drug companies have for their latest drugs,
nutrient research plods along - proving over and over again their worth but never
being able to get that information out to the public.
Up to 80 Percent of Americans are Magnesium-Deficient
Another reason that Dr. Altura felt magnesium was not given its due is because
there has been no lab test that will give an accurate reading of the magnesium
status in the tissues. Only one percent of magnesium of the body is distributed
in the blood, making a simple sample of magnesium in the blood highly inaccurate.
That's why most doctors who rely on blood tests for magnesium and not magnesium
deficiency signs and symptoms and realization that up to 80 percent of the
population is deficient, will miss an important diagnosis.
There's even more to the actual way magnesium works. It exists in the body
either as active magnesium ions or as inactive magnesium complexes bound to
proteins or other substances. A magnesium ion is a group of atoms that is missing
an electron, which makes it excitable as it searches to attach to something that
will replace its missing electron.
Magnesium ions constitute the most physiologically active fraction of magnesium
in the body; they are free to join in biochemical body processes and are not attached
to other substances. 8 Most clinical laboratories only assess total "serum"
magnesium, which mixes up both active and inactive types.
The Alturas took it upon themselves to develop and research a method that would
test specifically for magnesium ions. It came about in 1987 and is called the Blood
Ionized Magnesium Test. Its accuracy has been confirmed countless times with sensitive
digital imaging microscopy, atomic absorption spectroscopy and the magnesium
fluorescent probe. With this test it is now possible to directly measure the levels of
magnesium ions in whole blood, plasma and serum using ion-selective electrodes. 8 The
Alturas have used the ionized magnesium test in hundreds of research trials on dozens
of different conditions proving, for example, that the 22 conditions listed
above are related to magnesium deficiency. 9-15
Unfortunately, I'm not able to tell you that the ionized magnesium test is readily
available. The Alturas do ionized magnesium tests at their laboratory at SUNY in New
York and the testing equipment is available through an outside manufacturer to
interested labs. (I've included the Altura contact information, below.)
How to Get Enough Magnesium
How do I get enough magnesium is a question that I'm frequently asked. If there
is enough magnesium in the soil where green leafy vegetables, nuts, and seeds are
grown then we have a chance to obtain magnesium from our diet. Organic foods may
have more magnesium, but only if farmers replenish their soil with magnesium-rich
fertilizers. Most fertilizer used on factory farms relies heavily on nitrogen,
phosphorous, and potassium to make plants grow and appear healthy.
However, if magnesium and other minerals and micronutrients are not introduced
the plants may look good but are not packed with the nutrition we need. Growers
should be required to use top-quality fertilizers and should test their crops for
the long list of nutrients we need to stay healthy.
In general, to get as much magnesium as possible in the diet, eat plenty of
organic leafy green vegetables, nuts and seeds every day. Adding green drinks to
your menu will help you achieve a higher magnesium status. However, if you are
suffering from the following symptoms you may need supplemental magnesium:
muscle twitches, tics, or spasms "Charlie horse" (the muscle spasm that
occurs when you stretch your legs) insomnia or restless sleep stress back pain headaches,
cluster headaches, migraines, stiff and aching muscles, bones and joints that need continued
chiropractic treatment, weakness, hypoglycemia, diabetes, nervousness, hyperactivity,
high blood pressure, osteoporosis, PMS, constipation, angina, kidney stones, aging,
depression, heart attack, irregular heartbeat, attention deficit disorder,
aggressive behavior, chronic fatigue syndrome, stroke, anxiety, confusion, muscle weakness,
hiccups, high-strung, exhaustion from exercise, seizures.
The Calcium-to-Magnesium Ratio
Supplementing with magnesium must also take into account the balance between calcium and magnesium.
Finland, which, from 1973 to 1999 had the highest recorded incidence of heart attack in middle-aged men
in the world, also has a high calcium-to-magnesium ratio in the diet at 4 parts calcium to 1 part magnesium.
16-17 Americans in general have a high calcium-to-magnesium ratio in their diet and consequently in
their bodies; the U.S. ratio is 3.5-to-1. Our dietary emphasis on a high calcium intake without sufficient
magnesium and because of the excessive emphasis on women taking high doses of calcium for osteoporosis,
we are creating more imbalance between the two minerals.
Some researchers predict that the American ratio of calcium to magnesium is actually approaching 6-to-1,
yet, the recommended dietary ratio of calcium to magnesium in the United States is 2-to-1. Current research on
the paleolithic or caveman diet shows that the ratio of calcium to magnesium in the diet that our bodies evolved to eat
is 1-to-1. 18 In order to offset the deficiency magnesium induced by excess calcium and to treat the above 22
conditions, people may find it necessary to ingest one part magnesium to one part calcium in supplement form for a period
of months to a year. Stabilization on a healthy diet including green drinks may be possible after that time.
The most commons sources of magnesium are oxide, citrate, glycinate, and malate. People use oxide and
citrate if they suffer from constipation to take advantage of magnesium's laxative effect. Glycinate seems
to cause little diarrhea and is the best hoice for people who already have loose stools. Magnesium malate has been
promoted for people with fibromyalgia to help break up lactic acid that seems to be part of the fibromyalgia picture.
Dr. Carolyn Dean is a medical doctor and naturopathic doctor.
She is a writer, researcher, and health advocate. She is the lead author on
"Death by Medicine" and a health advisor to yeastconnection.com and curesnaturally.com.
She has written several health books including "The Miracle of Magnesium".
Her Web site is carolyndean.com. The Miracle of Magnesium is written for both
the lay public and practitioners. It is packed with hundreds of journal references
that will convince doctors of the importance of magnesium and its efficacy in
dozens of conditions--before reaching for the prescription pad.
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