Guest guest Posted February 19, 2003 Report Share Posted February 19, 2003 I'm forwarding this from my natural_healing list, where we've talked about the role of magnesium at great length over the years. Warmly, Moe >6-8-02 >Source for at least a portion of Part One: >http://www.bodyandfitness.com/Information/Health/Research/magnesium1.htm >Source for some of Part One is unknown >Part One: >MAGNESIUM: Miracle in Minutes > >DID YOU KNOW? > >Very few people are aware of the enormous role magnesium plays in our >bodies. After oxygen, water, and basic food, magnesium may be the most >important element needed by our bodies. So vitally important, yet hardly >known. > >Magnesium is by far the most important mineral in the body, activating over >300 different biochemical reactions in your body all necessary for your >body to function properly. > >Magnesium is more important than calcium, potassium or sodium and regulates >all three of them. When we get too low on oxygen, water or food, the >consequences are serious. Yet, we often don't realize the consequences of >magnesium deficiency. > >The improper use of magnesium among health professionals and the population >in general, is deeply responsible for many of the failures encountered >daily in treating chronic health conditions nationwide. >------ > >What are the symptoms of a magnesium deficiency? Millions suffer daily from: > >Insomnia >Sleep-disorders >Fatigue >Body-tension >Headaches >Heart-disorders >Low energy >High Blood Pressure >PMS >Muscle tension >Backaches >Constipation >Kidney stones >Osteoporosis >Accelerated aging >Depression >Irregular-heartbeat >Anxiety >Muscle cramps >Spasms >Irritability >and the list goes on.... > >90-95% of the population is deficient, including many of those who already >supplement it. Why? Due to the misleading information presented in common >magnesium texts. As a result, magnesium remains largely misunderstood, >largely misused and the problem goes on undetected. > >CALCIUM WARNING > >The use of magnesium today is often incorrect, resulting in frequent >failure to improve common conditions and complaints. One reason is this: >Calcium needs magnesium in order to assimilate into the body. However, when >too much calcium is consumed, it will pull magnesium out of the body parts >in order to assimilate. This creates a magnesium deficiency and the person >will get worse and feel accordingly. >------ > " Contrary to common belief, magnesium deficiency is very common even >amongst those who supplement it regularly " >------ >Excess calcium (in the wrong form/size for proper assimilation) in the body >results in calcium deposits on joints (often called arthritis). All of >these have been known to disappear after taking extra magnesium especially >the drink form. > >BECOME AN EXPERT > >After reading this data you will become your own expert on how to handle a >magnesium deficiency, which strikes most of our unknowing population. This >data is vital for everybody to know. It has changed the lives of many. It >may change your own as well. > >The fact remains that many of us suffer for months and years from chronic >conditions, which no one seems to detect the source of (not even the >so-called experts). With all the myriad of solutions we have sought, only a >lucky handful amongst us realize that the true source of these conditions >lies with a mineral deficiency. Many of these conditions listed before are >caused primarily by magnesium deficiency. > >This information may bring new hope to those who have already grown >hopeless about improving their condition. > >90-95% of the population is deficient, and many of them have thought that >regular magnesium supplements will fix magnesium deficiency. Unfortunately, >this isn't the case. Read on to understand this in full, and why water >soluble magnesium (angstrom in size) is the answer. > >To understand the importance of magnesium let's consider this: > >Magnesium is the most important mineral in the body, activating over 300 >different processes in your body; Among these functions are digestion, >energy production, muscle function, bone formation, creation of new cells, >activation of B vitamins, relaxation of muscles, the functioning of your >heart, kidneys, adrenals, brain, as well as the nervous system. >**************** >Source for Part Two is unknown >Part Two >The Mineral That Could Have Saved 4 Million Women >by Bill Sardi > >Modern medicine has made a remarkable admission. Its failure to utilize a >simple, inexpensive intravenous mineral drip might have saved the lives >millions of women over the past century. Modern medicine knew about the >cure since 1906. [New England Journal Medicine 333: 201-05, 1995] > >Around 210 million women become pregnant annually around the world and >every minute a woman dies in pregnancy or childbirth, with a quarter of >these deaths due to a condition called pre-eclampsia which can lead to the >more severe and mortal condition called eclampsia. Women may develop high >blood pressure during pregnancy (pre-eclampsia) and during or prior to >birth may experience life-threatening seizures (eclampsia). About 5-10 >percent of women in their first pregnancy develop pre-eclampsia. > >Over the past century, drugs rather than minerals have been employed to >treat eclampsia, Diazepam (Valium) in 1968 and then phenytoin (Dilantin) in >1987. During the period 1905 to 1987 an estimated 42 million women may have >undergone eclamptic convulsion and possibly 4 million died. The modern >therapy for eclampsia now includes calcium-blocking drugs and a host of >anti-hypertensive agents. Drugs may reduce the risk of severe high blood >pressure, but not the overall rate of hypertension nor the risk of eclampsia. > >[The Cochrane Library, Issue 2, 2002] Yet the anticonvulsant drugs continue >to be employed with little reliable evidence that they work. > >Finally, a just-released study of 10,141 women in 33 countries has shown >beyond a " reasonable doubt " that intravenous magnesium reduces the risks of >eclampsia among women with pre-eclampsia. >The relative risk of eclampsia was reduced by 58 percent and the mortality >rate nearly cut in half among women receiving magnesium ...compared to >those who receive a saline drip. >The authors of the study concluded that " magnesium sulfate is remarkably >effective at reducing the risk of eclampsia. " [The Lancet 359: 1877-90, >June 1, 2002] > >Not The First Time > >This wasn't the first study to conclusively show magnesium sulfate is a >remedy for eclampsia. In a 1995, a study heralded as the most important >obstetric trial of the 20th century, magnesium sulfate was found to be the >most effective approach to controlling convulsions during childbirth. >[british Medical Journal 311: 702-03, 1995] By 1998 data from numerous >studies had been analyzed and it was known that magnesium was superior to >any anticonvulsant drugs. [Cochrane Review 2002] This evidence still didn't >convince most obstetrical doctors. > >Seven years after the report showing magnesium reduces the risk of >mortality from eclampsia, a report endorsed by the World Health >Organization (WHO), UNICEF and the WORLD BANK, magnesium sulfate is still >not available to millions of women worldwide. British medical researchers >are pleading with the World Bank and WHO to fund and disseminate treatment >kits. [The Lancet 359: June 1, 2002] > >Clues Were There > >It wasn't as if physicians had no clues as to the cause of eclampsia. The >worldwide mortality rates from eclampsia vary widely from country to country. > >The mortality rate from eclampsia ranges from 0 to 13.9 percent. [European >Society Cardiology 21st Annual Congress, Sept. 1, 1999] So there are >obviously some modifiable factors involved in the development of eclampsia >among pregnant females. Pre-eclampsia and eclampsia are the most important >causes of death during pregnancy in the United Kingdom, USA and Nordic >countries, nations that consume the most calcium-rich dairy products. >Calcium and magnesium must be maintained in a proper ratio to maintain >proper muscle tone and prevent convulsive muscle spasms. Furthermore, >estrogen and progesterone levels, which increase as a pregnancy advances, >elevate the body's demand for magnesium. [Journal American College of >Nutrition 12: 442-58, 1993] Magnesium is a natural calcium blocker. >[American Journal Medicine 96: 63-76, 1994] > >Magnesium Shunned For Heart Disease Too > >This isn't the first time magnesium has been shunned in favor of >prescription drugs. In the 1990s a preliminary report showed that >intravenous magnesium reduced mortality rates following a heart attack. >This was apparently perceived as a threat to the sale of calcium-blocking >drugs used for the same purpose. Medical researchers, financially backed by >a pharmaceutical company that produces calcium-blocker drugs, deliberately >chose to use an excessive dose of intravenous magnesium to prove it was of >no value during the post-heart attack period. [Townsend Letter for Doctors, >October 1998] >The sale of calcium-blockers never faltered. There are more than 64 million >annual prescriptions for calcium blocking drugs (Procardia, Cardizem, >Norvasc, Verpamil, Adalat, Dilacor, Verelan, Calan), with sales exceeding >$2.5 billion. [American Druggist 1997] > >Magnesium May Prevent Sudden-Death Heart Attacks >(NOTE: Dr. Shealy emphasizes this in his book--- " HOLY WATER, Sacred Oils) > >Magnesium is not limited to treating heart disease after a heart attack. A >shortage of dietary magnesium has been repeatedly shown to be associated >with an increased risk of sudden-death heart attack. Unequivocally, a >shortage of magnesium from the American diet, in particular the absence or >shortage of magnesium in drinking water, is directly related to >sudden-death heart attack. [Epidemiology 10: 31-36, 1999; Heart 82: 455-60, >1999; American Journal Epidemiology 143: 456-62, 1996] Out of 750,000 heart >attacks in the USA annually, an estimated 340,000 deaths occur within one >hour of a heart attack. [Journal Nutrition Health Aging 5: 173-78, 2001] > >One study showed the relative risk of sudden-death heart attack is more >than 1.5 times higher among adults who consume on average 105 milligrams of >magnesium a day compared to adults who consume 233 milligrams a day. >[Magnesium Trace Element Research 9: 143-51, 1990] > >Recently researchers reported on the effects of slowly withdrawing >magnesium from the diet of postmenopausal women. Women began to exhibit >abnormal heart rhythms as circulating magnesium levels declined. [American >Journal Clinical Nutrition 75: 550-54, 2002] > >Of the minerals removed during water softening, magnesium is the only >mineral found to be deficient in the heart muscle of sudden-death heart >attack victims. [science 208: 198-200, 1980] In an animal experiment, no >rodents experienced a sudden-death heart attack when magnesium levels were >adequate, whereas 4 of 11 rodents with low magnesium levels experienced a >sudden lethal heart muscle spasm. [Journal American Collage Cardiology 27: >1771-76, 1996] > >For comparison, there are about 50,000 tobacco-related deaths per year in >the USA and consequently massive smoking-cessation efforts are undertaken. >There are more than 200,000 to 300,000 avoidable sudden-death heart attacks >that could be prevented by the provision of an inexpensive mineral, yet >public health authorities do nothing to stop the problem. This amounts to >over 500 needless deaths per day in the USA. > >The current approach to cardiovascular disease is to reduce circulating >cholesterol levels which has been shown to reduce the incidence of heart >attacks but has not reduced mortality rates. Sudden fatal heart failure may >be related to magnesium deficiency rather than high cholesterol levels. >[Medical Hypotheses 43: 187-92, 1994] > >Widespread Dietary Deficiency > >A 1994 Gallup poll found that 72 percent of Americans don't consume >sufficient amounts of magnesium. The widespread consumption of processed >foods has led to a progressive decline in dietary magnesium. While nuts and >green leafy vegetables are good sources of magnesium, the shortage of >magnesium in the American diet, about 200-300 milligrams per day, is not >likely to be made up through foods alone. > >Progressive decline of dietary magnesium consumption >Years Magnesium intake milligrams per day >1900-08 475-500 >1909-13 415-435 >1925-29 385-398 >1935-39 360-375 >1947-49 358-370 >1957-59 340-360 >1965-76 300-340 >1978-85 225-318 >1990-2002 175-225 >[Magnesium Trace Elements 10: 162-28, 1997] > >Supplementation Advised > >Only universal magnesium supplementation is likely to make up for such a >widespread mineral deficiency. Foods cannot easily be fortified with >magnesium because it is a bulky mineral that would alter the consistency >and taste of flour and foods. Magnesium cannot be added to tap water >because it would erode piping. Either magnesium pills or magnesium added to >bottled water would make up for this mineral deficiency. >Currently, only 5 major brands of bottled water provide a desirable measure >of more than 75 milligrams of magnesium per liter and only one brand has a >ratio of magnesium that exceeds that of calcium. > >Blood tests for magnesium are notoriously inaccurate. Only 1 percent of the >total body magnesium pool exists outside of living cells. So blood serum >levels are notoriously inaccurate. [Clin Chem Lab Med 37: 1011-33, 1999] >Only red-blood cell magnesium levels accurately determine the risk for >pre-eclampsia and/or magnesium deficiency, but this test is not commonly >performed in laboratories. [American Journal Hypertension 13: 765-69, 2000] > >A bias against the use of intravenous magnesium sulfate by modern medicine >has taken a terrible toll on humankind. Magnesium sulfate, also known as >Epsom salt, is not absorbed orally and attracts water in the colon and >would thus act as a laxative. So Epsom salts are not recommended orally. >Magnesium pills are recommended (200-400 milligrams per day). Magnesium has >been called the " The Forgotten Mineral " and the " 5-Cent Miracle Tablet " by >medical researchers. Numerous researchers have reported that the provision >of this mineral in the population at large would greatly diminish the >incidence of >kidney stones (1 in 11 Americans), calcified mitral heart valve (1 in 12 >Americans), premenstrual tension, constipation, miscarriages, stillbirths, >strokes, diabetes, thyroid failure, asthma, chronic eyelid twitch >(blepharospasm), brittle bones, chronic migraines, muscle spasms and >anxiety reactions. [Pediatric Asthma, Allergy Immunology 5: 273-79; Journal >Bone Mineral Research 13: 749-58, 1998; Magnesium 5: 1-8, 1986; Medical >Hypotheses 43: 187-92, 1994] That's a lot of health benefits for a nickel. >Sufficient provision of magnesium in the American population would likely >reduce health care costs by billions of dollars. > >June 4, 2002 >End of article >************** >Source for Part Three: >http://www.billsardi.com/sdm.asp?pg=news & specific=49 >Part Three >03/19/2002 >Too much calcium, not enough magnesium > >HEART BECOME IRRITABLE WHEN DEPRIVED OF MAGNESIUM > >The Human Nutrition Research Center in Grand Forks, North Dakota has >released an alarming report that reveals when humans are deprived of >magnesium they may begin to experience abnormal heart beats. [American >Journal Clinical Nutrition 75: 550-54, March 2002] > >The heart muscle of people who experience sudden-death heart attack has >been found to be low in magnesium. Areas of the world where drinking water >is low in magnesium (soft water areas) have higher rates of heart attacks. > >Magnesium is a muscle relaxant, while calcium is a muscle constrictor. Low >magnesium intake is associated with muscle spasm, tremors and convulsions. > >Most Americans, particularly women, have been advised to consume 1200-1500 >milligrams of calcium daily. Virtually none of these women have been told >that calcium in single doses that exceed 500 milligrams are not absorbed >and that they only need an additional 400-600 milligrams of supplemental >calcium since their diet already provides about 800 milligrams of this >mineral. > >Since 99 percent of magnesium resides inside living cells, blood serum >levels are not a good indicator of magnesium deficiency. In other words, >your doctor can't easily tell you by a blood test if your magnesium levels >are low. Most Americans, 8 in 10, do not consume enough magnesium. > >The countries that have the highest mortality rates in the world are the >Scandinavian countries and New Zealand where more calcium is consumed from >dairy products, while for comparison the lowest mortality rates in the >world are in Portugal and Japan where calcium-rich dairy products are not >consumed regularly. > >Americans consume about 800 milligrams of calcium daily (milk drinkers may >get 1200-1500 mgs from their diet alone), but only consume about 275 >milligrams of magnesium. Thus the dominance of calcium over magnesium >produces symptoms of muscle spasm. Migraines, eyelid twitch, heart >flutters, back aches, premenstrual tension, leg cramps and constipation are >all linked to calcum overload. Excessive calcium may also result in kidney >stones (1 in 11 Americans) and heart valve calcifications (mitral valve, 1 >in 12 Americans). > >A significant percentage of American adults consume more than 2000 >milligrams of daily calcium, the point where side effects of overdosage >begin to be reported. More than 300,000 sudden-death heart attacks are >reported annually in the US (more than 80 per day) which are believed to be >related to excessive calcium and a shortage of magnesium. > >Modern medicine's answer to the problem is to prescribe billions of dollars >of calcium-blocker drugs. Magnesium is a natural calcium blocker, but this >goes unrecognized by most physicians. > >Researchers warn that adults who consume excessive amounts of caffeine or >alcohol, or who take water pills (diuretics), are prone to experience >irregular heart beats and should consume more magnesium. The same is true >for diabetics and people with low thyroid. Most Americans consume tap water >that has been softened (sodium added) which worsens the problem. > >American adults need to supplement their diet with 200-400 milligrams of >magnesium. The only side effect of too much magnesium is loose stool. >Reducing dosage resolves this problem. > >Copyright Knowledge of Health, Inc., 2002 > >Written By: Bill Sardi > >See our Top News here. > > >Copyright 2002 Knowledge of Health. . >******************** The above information has been forwarded to you by >SunToads Health News >(formerly named Health Matters). We write very little of the materials you >receive. We do not use a web site. PLEASE NOTE: Some rs receive >only a portion of their email. This >is because these rs have chosen email providers/servers that have >restrictions, often unknown to you, on email such as size limits, storage >time limits, numerical limits, etc. Please check to see if you have >restrictions applied to you. 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