Magnesium is one of the most
important minerals in the body-especially for those with fibromyalgia.
It is responsible for proper
enzyme activity and transmission of muscle and nerve impulses, and it aids in
maintaining a proper pH balance. It helps metabolize carbohydrates, proteins,
and fats into energy. Magnesium also helps synthesize the genetic material in cells
and helps to remove toxic substances, such as aluminum and ammonia, from the
body. Magnesium and calcium help keep the heart beating; magnesium relaxes the
heart, and calcium activates it. A deficiency of magnesium, then, may increase
the risk of heart disease.
Magnesium also plays a significant
role in regulating the neurotransmitters.
A deficiency can cause muscle
pain, joint pain, headache, fatigue, depression, leg cramps, high blood
pressure, heart disease and arrhythmia, constipation, irritable bowel syndrome,
insomnia, hair loss, confusion, personality disorders, swollen gums, and loss
of appetite. High intake of calcium may reduce magnesium absorption. Simple
sugars and/or stress can deplete magnesium.
Magnesium is a natural sedative
and can be used to treat muscle spasm, anxiety, depression, insomnia, and
constipation. It is also a potent antidepressant. It helps with intermittent
claudication, a condition caused by a restriction of blood flow to the legs.
It’s effective in relieving some of the symptoms associated with PMS, and women
suffering from PMS are usually deficient in it. New studies are validating what
many nutrition-oriented physicians have known for years: a magnesium deficiency
can trigger migraine headaches.
Magnesium also helps relax constricted bronchial
tubes associated with asthma. In
fact, a combination of vitamin B6
and magnesium, along with
avoidance of wheat and dairy products,
has cured many of my young
asthmatic patients.
Unfortunately, dietary magnesium
intake in this country is steadily declining. It has been consistently depleted
in our soils and further depleted in plants by the use of potassium- and
phosphorus containing fertilizers, which reduce a plant’s ability to uptake magnesium.
Food processing also removes magnesium, while high-carbohydrate and high-fat
diets increase the body’s need for it. Diuretic medications further deplete
total body magnesium.
It is estimated that up to 80% of
those with FMS/CFS are deficient in magnesium.
What are some risk factors for magnesium deficiency?
1)
Excessive stress in your life whether from physical, emotional, or
psychological stressors. Stressful conditions cause the body to use more
magnesium and a lack of magnesium tends to make stress responses more severe.
The hormones associated with stress, adrenaline and cortisol, were also
associated with magnesium deficiency.
2) Eating
or drinking highly sugary products including those with artificial sugar.
Refined sugar has no magnesium and actually causes your body to excrete
magnesium through the kidneys. In addition, these products also strip your body
of many other highly essential nutrients and can leave you at risk for many
health problems.
3) Drinking
alcoholic beverages. Alcohol also increases kidney excretion of magnesium.
Alcohol also tends to lower the efficiency of your digestive tract and lower
Vitamin D levels, which can further lower magnesium levels.
4) Drinking
caffeinated beverages. Caffeine works similarly to refined sugar in that it
causes the kidneys to excrete magnesium.
5) Taking
diuretics, heart medications, asthma medication, birth control pills, or
estrogen replacement therapy. These medications increase magnesium excretion
through the kidneys and can lead to deficiency.
6) Drinking
dark colored carbonated beverages. The phosphates contained in dark beverages
bind with magnesium in the body to reduce your magnesium levels.
CFS/Fibromyalgia Formula
In the “old days,” when I used to
own and oversee my medical practice we would have patients come into the clinic
for high dose vitamin and mineral IV therapy. These IVs had large doses of
magnesium, as well as other vitamins and minerals and patients usually felt
tremendously better after receiving them each week. The IVs weren’t without
fault-they were expensive, $75-$90 a treatment, required one and half hours to
be administered and their results were short lived.
Realizing the shortcomings of
these IVs, I set out to create a “pack” of easy to take high dose supplements
that could be taken in a pill and capsule form. This is where my CFS/Fibromyalgia
Formula was created.
The
CFS/Fibro Formula
is loaded with the high doses of the essential nutrients including all the
vitamins, minerals, essential fatty acids, amino acids, malic acid, and extra
magnesium (680mg).
The Amino acids are what make our
brain chemicals. They help restore normal brain function, increase mental
clarity, reduce depression, anxiety, and fatigue. The Essential Fatty Acids reduce pain,
inflammation, depression, anxiety, allow brain cells to communicate with one
another, increase mental clarity, and boosts energy. The Formula contains all the high dose
vitamins and minerals based on The Optimal Daily Allowance according to
Orthomolecular Medicine.
For anyone with fibromyalgia I
recommend taking an Optimal Daily HIGH DOSE MULTIVITAMIN WITH minimum of 600mg
of magnesium, preferably magnesium citrate or chelate (has best absorption,
won’t irritate the stomach). You can also add magnesium in 150mg doses-take
until loose bowel movement then reduce dose until have normal bowel movement
(remember magnesium is a natural muscle relaxant and will relax the colon as
well-great for IBS and constipation as well as stiff achy muscles.
Dear Dr. Murphree,
ReplyDeleteI am reading your book "Treating and Beating FMS and CFS", 2003 edition. I'm up to chapter 9 and I am amazed at your command of body chemistry, nutrition, and this awful condition. You see, I'm one of the men who has FMS, which commenced after a 90 hour work week I put in on a highly stressful project while sick with pneumonia.
But this post is about magnesium. I'm starting it as well as 5HTP today to see if I can get off of the sleep meds. I'm trying to lose Zolpidem from my daily pills.
I hope to see you in person this winter. I live in Iowa so it's quite a drive (I refuse to fly any more). At least I'm going to be in on the September teleconference.
Thank you for the work you do, and especially thank you for writing a rational book that gives hope to people. After 8 years of dangerous and costly pain meds that don't work, I am beginning to actually feel optimistic about this.
Best regards,
Bill Niemi
Mt. Vernon, IA