Guest guest Posted December 14, 2001 Report Share Posted December 14, 2001 " Modern humans have departed from the diet the forces of nature designed for our well-being in a variety of ways - our reliance on cereal grains, our higher intake of sodium, our low intake of good-quality essential fats, to name a few - but we've made no more critical step off the Paleolithic path than the startling decrease in the mineral magnesium, along with an equally dramatic increase in our intake of its " opposing partner " mineral, calcium. And this imbalance has brought with it a plethora of modern ills. Let's first examine what *was* through the lens of history, with a look at what the diet of our ancient ancestors provided, and see how we measure up. Paleolithic nutrition researchers Loren Cordain and Boyd Eaton have devoted innumerable hours of thought, study, and analysis to the reconstruction of a modern model of the diet our ancestors thrived on. By their estimates, the magnesium intake of early man appears to have been as much as 800 to 1,500 mg per day. Interestingly, this amount of magnesium approximately equals what Dr. Cordain estimates the daily calcium intake to have been at that time, giving early humans a calcium-to-magnesium ratio of about 1:1. Look at how things have changed; contrast those Paleolithic figures with the intake of Americans today. We now on average consume a diet that provides only an estimated 200 to 300 mg of magnesium and 1,200 to 1,500 mg of calcium, making our modern ration not the 1:1 of old but 5:1 or even as high as 15:1 by some estimates. Nowadays we're taking in five to fifteen times more calcium than magnesium much to the detriment of our health. Consider this list of known conditions that research has correlated with deficiency of magnesium: heart disease and sudden death, diabetes, high blood pressure, asthma and chronic bronchitis, chronic fatigue syndrome, migraine headaches, muscle cramps, premenstrual syndrome, depression and other psychiatric disorders, and susceptibility to the brain-damaging effects of food additives such as aspartame and monosodium glutamate (MSG). Quite an impressive list, and that's not even the half of it. Our readers and patients in our clinic often ask us, " If you could take or prescribe only one supplement, what would it be? " And the answer is simple: magnesium. It's already been identified as a required cofactor for more than three hundred enzymatic reactions in the body - and who knows how many more have yet to be uncovered? If its so important, you may be thinking, why don't you hear more about it? Again, the answer is pretty simple: magnesium has no commercial lobby to tout its benefits on the airwaves. Calcium has the diary lobby, fiber gets its media boost from the grain producers and cereal manufacturers, vitamin C has the citrus growers trumpeting its many benefits, but poor old magnesium is a media orphan. However, waves of interest have begun to form, and some previous citizens groups have begun to act on magnesium's behalf. What's all the hullabaloo about? " source: Protein Power LifePlan p205 - 206 To be continued, Rob Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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