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" How can one simple element have such diverse and potent physiological

actions? One important way that magnesium works its miracles is through its

influence on and regulation of calcium, a mineral that's gotten than its

share of media play in recent years.

 

You'd have to have been locked in a cave on the most remote corner of

Bora-Bora not to have heard the hype - particularly aimed at women over

forty - about taking more calcium to prevent deficiency and keep bones

strong. And so now we have the entire nation chomping calcium antacids by

the handful, drinking calcium-fortified orange juice, downing calcium

supplements of all kinds in an effort to raise their intake of calcium.

 

But guess what the calcium hype fails to point out? It takes both calcium

and magnesium (along with vitamin D) as well as an entire intricate symphony

of bit players (molybdenum, boron, phosphorous, adequate protein, and

bone-building hormones) to properly build and maintain bone. In fact, high

levels of calcium in the blood can actually weaken bone and make it more

brittle! And to make matters worse, taking excessive calcium without

magnesium will promote magnesium deficiency, leading to the development of

any of the host of diseases we mentioned earlier.

 

While its true that our bones need plenty of calcium to make them strong, if

it reaches excessive levels *within other cells*, its quite harmful - a

situation that can easily arise in the face of an unbalanced intake of

calcium and magnesium. Let's see how this works.

 

Beyond its role in making bones hard, calcium serves as a critical

stimulating component in the generation of electrical impulses in many

tissues throughout the body - notably, the heart, the muscles, and the brain

and nerves. Calcium resides in the tissues in the fluid that bathes the

outside of the cells - and that's where the cells want calcium to stay until

it's called for.

 

When its needed for the generation of an electrical impulse, the cells open

tiny channels in their membranes - called, appropriately enough, the calcium

channels - to admit a controlled number of calcium ions. The inrush of

these calcium ions alters the electrical charge within the cells and creates

the spark for transmission of an electrical impulse. As soon as it has done

its job, however, the cell hustles the calcium back out. In fact, calcium

inside the cell is so toxic that the cells expend an enormous amount of

energy keeping it in its proper place - on the outside. When too much gets

in and remains inside the cell, bad things happen.

 

Many disease processes occur because the tight regulation of the calcium

channel fails, permitting calcium ions to flow into the cells unabated.

Rising calcium levels within a cell activate its energy-production systems,

setting in motion a variety of effects depending on the tissue in question.

 

For example, calcium flowing unrestricted into the smooth muscle cells in

the coronary arteries of the heart can bring on arterial spasm and the chest

pain called angina. Calcium overstimulation of the cells in the muscular

layer of the temporal arteries (or others supplying blood to the brain) can

cause migraine headaches. Excess calcium entering the cells of the smooth

muscles surrounding the small airways in the lung causes constriction -

called bronchospasm - and the resultant wheezing of asthma and other

restrictive lung disorders. If too much calcium flows into the delicate

cells of the brain, the repeated discharge of energy that follows may

deplete their energy stores, killing the cells!

 

Pharmaceutical companies have developed an entire family of drugs to prevent

this excess flow of calcium into the interior of the cells. These drugs,

called calcium channel blockers, are among the most versatile drugs on the

market, currently approved for a wide range of medical indications. This

single class of drugs can reduce or eliminate the chest pain from heart

disease by preventing coronary arterial spasm, alleviate the blinding pain

of migraine headaches and prevent their onset, treat high blood pressure,

reduce asthmatic attacks, and even relieve vasomotor rhinitis, the drippy

nose often associated with severe allergies.

 

All these disparate diseases respond to a single action: preventing excess

calcium from entering the cell by blocking the calcium channel. Ah, the

miracles of modern medical technology! But here the story gets even more

interesting, and its one reason we titled this chapter " The Magnesium

Miracle. "

 

Magnesium is nature's calcium channel blocker, acting as a natural retardant

to the flow of calcium ions into the cells. Adequate magnesium levels on

the inside of the cell prevent calcium's entry from without, and all is well

within the cell. If the interior of the cell becomes magnesium deficient,

however, watch out! Calcium can then enter at will. Medical researchers

have repeatedly demonstrated a low level of magnesium inside the cells in

virtually every disorder treated by calcium channel blocking drugs.

 

So why don't doctors treat these patients with magnesium instead of the

terribly expensive prescription medications? For one thing, because drug

companies can't patent natural substances, there's no army of pharmaceutical

representatives knocking on the doctor's doors, crowing about the advantages

of simple, cheap magnesium in treating these disorders. But the information

does slowly trickle down, and the good news is, many physicians are

beginning to use more magnesium in the treatment of disease.

 

In the emergency room, physicians now routinely give magnesium directly into

the vein to relieve chest pain, stabilize the heart rhythm, and reduce or

prevent the death of heart muscle cells during a heart attack. And more and

more in the ER, astute physicians, recognizing the power of magnesium to

relax the spastic respiratory muscles and open the airways, have begun to

give it by the IV route to break asthmatic attacks. (Several research

studies have demonstrated that magnesium deficiency occurs nearly uniformly

among asthma sufferers and that replacing it will reduce the number of

attacks.)

 

Obstetricians have been on the magnesium bandwagon since long before we did

our medical training, routinely giving intravenous injections of magnesium

sulfate to treat toxemia of pregnancy, rapidly reducing the malignant high

blood pressure sometimes associated with labor and delivery.

 

And since the discovery that virtually every patient admitted to the medical

intensive care unit is deficient in magnesium, its intravenous (IV)

supplementation in these critically ill people has become commonplace.

Unfortunately, most physicians don't yet use magnesium to prevent these

disorders, mainly relying on it to treat diseases after they're present.

 

As is too often the case with modern medicine, we close the barn door after

the horse has gotten away. But that approach, we hope, is changing. "

 

source: Protein Power LifePlan p207-209

 

Rob

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Are there any benefits to taking magnesium glycinate ?

donna

In a message dated 01/15/12 1:07:32 PM, rob.bartlett writes:

 

<< ological

actions? One important way that magnesium works its miracles is through its

influence on and regulation of calcium, >>

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Rob,

Good Afternoon!

Thank you for the clear and concise information. This confirms

what I have heard from a variety of sources regarding excess calcium

intake. Why take calcium channel blockers when we have one in nature

(magnesium)?

 

Just one way that the public are being led astray in regards to

their health info! As the article states...the groups with special

interests are the purveyors of that information. It takes groups like

these to get the real truth out! Thanks again!! :-)

JoAnn

 

P.S. My son prints newsletters for retirement centers. According to

this report, they are being given false information in the health

section of the magazine. Really pathetic!

 

This quote especially interested me.

 

" But guess what the calcium hype fails to point out? It takes both

calcium

and magnesium (along with vitamin D) as well as an entire intricate

symphony

of bit players (molybdenum, boron, phosphorous, adequate protein, and

bone-building hormones) to properly build and maintain bone. In fact,

high

levels of calcium in the blood can actually weaken bone and make it

more

brittle! And to make matters worse, taking excessive calcium without

magnesium will promote magnesium deficiency, leading to the

development of

any of the host of diseases we mentioned earlier.

 

While its true that our bones need plenty of calcium to make them

strong, if

it reaches excessive levels *within other cells*, its quite harmful -

a

situation that can easily arise in the face of an unbalanced intake of

calcium and magnesium. "

 

 

" Rob Bartlett " <rob.bartlett@s...> wrote:

> " How can one simple element have such diverse and potent

physiological

> actions? One important way that magnesium works its miracles is

through its

> influence on and regulation of calcium, a mineral that's gotten

than its

> share of media play in recent years.

>

> You'd have to have been locked in a cave on the most remote corner

of

> Bora-Bora not to have heard the hype - particularly aimed at women

over

> forty - about taking more calcium to prevent deficiency and keep

bones

> strong. And so now we have the entire nation chomping calcium

antacids by

> the handful, drinking calcium-fortified orange juice, downing

calcium

> supplements of all kinds in an effort to raise their intake of

calcium.

>

> But guess what the calcium hype fails to point out? It takes both

calcium

> and magnesium (along with vitamin D) as well as an entire intricate

symphony

> of bit players (molybdenum, boron, phosphorous, adequate protein,

and

> bone-building hormones) to properly build and maintain bone. In

fact, high

> levels of calcium in the blood can actually weaken bone and make it

more

> brittle! And to make matters worse, taking excessive calcium

without

> magnesium will promote magnesium deficiency, leading to the

development of

> any of the host of diseases we mentioned earlier.

>

> While its true that our bones need plenty of calcium to make them

strong, if

> it reaches excessive levels *within other cells*, its quite

harmful - a

> situation that can easily arise in the face of an unbalanced intake

of

> calcium and magnesium. Let's see how this works.

>

> Beyond its role in making bones hard, calcium serves as a critical

> stimulating component in the generation of electrical impulses in

many

> tissues throughout the body - notably, the heart, the muscles, and

the brain

> and nerves. Calcium resides in the tissues in the fluid that

bathes the

> outside of the cells - and that's where the cells want calcium to

stay until

> it's called for.

>

> When its needed for the generation of an electrical impulse, the

cells open

> tiny channels in their membranes - called, appropriately enough,

the calcium

> channels - to admit a controlled number of calcium ions. The

inrush of

> these calcium ions alters the electrical charge within the cells

and creates

> the spark for transmission of an electrical impulse. As soon as it

has done

> its job, however, the cell hustles the calcium back out. In fact,

calcium

> inside the cell is so toxic that the cells expend an enormous

amount of

> energy keeping it in its proper place - on the outside. When too

much gets

> in and remains inside the cell, bad things happen.

>

> Many disease processes occur because the tight regulation of the

calcium

> channel fails, permitting calcium ions to flow into the cells

unabated.

> Rising calcium levels within a cell activate its energy-production

systems,

> setting in motion a variety of effects depending on the tissue in

question.

>

> For example, calcium flowing unrestricted into the smooth muscle

cells in

> the coronary arteries of the heart can bring on arterial spasm and

the chest

> pain called angina. Calcium overstimulation of the cells in the

muscular

> layer of the temporal arteries (or others supplying blood to the

brain) can

> cause migraine headaches. Excess calcium entering the cells of the

smooth

> muscles surrounding the small airways in the lung causes

constriction -

> called bronchospasm - and the resultant wheezing of asthma and other

> restrictive lung disorders. If too much calcium flows into the

delicate

> cells of the brain, the repeated discharge of energy that follows

may

> deplete their energy stores, killing the cells!

>

> Pharmaceutical companies have developed an entire family of drugs

to prevent

> this excess flow of calcium into the interior of the cells. These

drugs,

> called calcium channel blockers, are among the most versatile drugs

on the

> market, currently approved for a wide range of medical

indications. This

> single class of drugs can reduce or eliminate the chest pain from

heart

> disease by preventing coronary arterial spasm, alleviate the

blinding pain

> of migraine headaches and prevent their onset, treat high blood

pressure,

> reduce asthmatic attacks, and even relieve vasomotor rhinitis, the

drippy

> nose often associated with severe allergies.

>

> All these disparate diseases respond to a single action: preventing

excess

> calcium from entering the cell by blocking the calcium channel.

Ah, the

> miracles of modern medical technology! But here the story gets

even more

> interesting, and its one reason we titled this chapter " The

Magnesium

> Miracle. "

>

> Magnesium is nature's calcium channel blocker, acting as a natural

retardant

> to the flow of calcium ions into the cells. Adequate magnesium

levels on

> the inside of the cell prevent calcium's entry from without, and

all is well

> within the cell. If the interior of the cell becomes magnesium

deficient,

> however, watch out! Calcium can then enter at will. Medical

researchers

> have repeatedly demonstrated a low level of magnesium inside the

cells in

> virtually every disorder treated by calcium channel blocking drugs.

>

> So why don't doctors treat these patients with magnesium instead of

the

> terribly expensive prescription medications? For one thing,

because drug

> companies can't patent natural substances, there's no army of

pharmaceutical

> representatives knocking on the doctor's doors, crowing about the

advantages

> of simple, cheap magnesium in treating these disorders. But the

information

> does slowly trickle down, and the good news is, many physicians are

> beginning to use more magnesium in the treatment of disease.

>

> In the emergency room, physicians now routinely give magnesium

directly into

> the vein to relieve chest pain, stabilize the heart rhythm, and

reduce or

> prevent the death of heart muscle cells during a heart attack. And

more and

> more in the ER, astute physicians, recognizing the power of

magnesium to

> relax the spastic respiratory muscles and open the airways, have

begun to

> give it by the IV route to break asthmatic attacks. (Several

research

> studies have demonstrated that magnesium deficiency occurs nearly

uniformly

> among asthma sufferers and that replacing it will reduce the number

of

> attacks.)

>

> Obstetricians have been on the magnesium bandwagon since long

before we did

> our medical training, routinely giving intravenous injections of

magnesium

> sulfate to treat toxemia of pregnancy, rapidly reducing the

malignant high

> blood pressure sometimes associated with labor and delivery.

>

> And since the discovery that virtually every patient admitted to

the medical

> intensive care unit is deficient in magnesium, its intravenous (IV)

> supplementation in these critically ill people has become

commonplace.

> Unfortunately, most physicians don't yet use magnesium to prevent

these

> disorders, mainly relying on it to treat diseases after they're

present.

>

> As is too often the case with modern medicine, we close the barn

door after

> the horse has gotten away. But that approach, we hope, is

changing. "

>

> source: Protein Power LifePlan p207-209

>

> Rob

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There needs to be, once and for all, some general consensus about what the

best forms of magnesium are.

-

<dfnewman

 

Saturday, December 15, 2001 2:30 PM

Re: magnesium - part 3

 

 

> Are there any benefits to taking magnesium glycinate ?

> donna

> In a message dated 01/15/12 1:07:32 PM, rob.bartlett writes:

>

> << ological

> actions? One important way that magnesium works its miracles is through

its

> influence on and regulation of calcium, >>

>

>

>

> Getting well is done one step at a time, day by day, building health

> and well being.

>

> To learn more about the Gettingwell group,

> Subscription and list archives are at:

> Gettingwell

>

>

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In a message dated 12/15/01 9:33:59 PM Pacific Standard Time,

counterpnt writes:

 

> There needs to be, once and for all, some general consensus about what the

> best forms of magnesium are.

 

I vote for magnesium aspartate. Maybe different forms are for different

purposes.

 

Starris

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My question is what is magnesium glycinate used for?

thanks

Donna

In a message dated 01/16/12 3:47:34 PM, Starrisg writes:

 

<<

I vote for magnesium aspartate. Maybe different forms are for different

purposes.

>>

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I keep hearing that magnesium aspartate is a desireable form of magnesium.

-

<dfnewman

 

Sunday, December 16, 2001 12:09 PM

Re: magnesium - part 3

 

 

> My question is what is magnesium glycinate used for?

> thanks

> Donna

> In a message dated 01/16/12 3:47:34 PM, Starrisg writes:

>

> <<

> I vote for magnesium aspartate. Maybe different forms are for different

> purposes.

> >>

>

>

>

> Getting well is done one step at a time, day by day, building health

> and well being.

>

> To learn more about the Gettingwell group,

> Subscription and list archives are at:

> Gettingwell

>

>

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  • 2 weeks later...

I keep hearing that magnesium citrate is a desirable form of magnesium.

-

<dfnewman

 

Sunday, December 16, 2001 12:09 PM

Re: magnesium - part 3

 

 

> My question is what is magnesium glycinate used for?

> thanks

> Donna

> In a message dated 01/16/12 3:47:34 PM, Starrisg writes:

>

> <<

> I vote for magnesium aspartate. Maybe different forms are for different

> purposes.

> >>

>

>

>

> Getting well is done one step at a time, day by day, building health

> and well being.

>

> To learn more about the Gettingwell group,

> Subscription and list archives are at:

> Gettingwell

>

>

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