Magnesium and
Aging
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Contents
Introduction
Is There A Magnesium Deficiency
Problem?
3 Causes for Widespread
Magnesium Deficiency
Blood Test for Magnesium Level
How Much Magnesium Is Enough?
Common Symptoms of Magnesium
Deficiency
Clinical Uses of Magnesium
A.
Prevention and Management of osteoporosis ( PPMO)
B. Prevention of Cardiovascular
Diseases (CVD)
C.
Pre-menstrual Syndrome, Diabetes, Depression, and Chronic Fatigue
Discussion
Introduction
Magnesium (Mg) is a ubiquitous element in nature. Both
plants and animals have an absolute requirement for magnesium, a mineral
that plays a central role in photosynthesis in plants, and many of the metabolic
reactions in animals.
Magnesium is a cofactor in over 300 enzymatic reactions in human beings.
It is required for sodium, potassium, and calcium homeostasis, as well as
for the formation, transfer, storage, and utilization of ATP (the energy
currency in our body) at the cellular level. You cannot live without
magnesium. The lower the cellular
level of magnesium, the faster disease states develop and the faster aging
progresses. It's that simple.
Is There
A Magnesium Deficiency Problem?
The
fact is that only about 25% of Americans meet the Recommended Dietary
Allowance (RDA) of 300 - 400 mg per day for magnesium. Most American
women get only 175 - 225 mg per day, and men 220 - 260 mg. To get enough
magnesium from the diet, one needs to consume about 2000 calories a day.
Nuts, whole grains and legumes are high in magnesium.
3 Causes
for Widespread Magnesium Deficiency
A. Low Dietary Magnesium Levels from the North
American Diet: In countries where a refined diet is the norm, such as North
America, there is a universal deficiency in magnesium intake from the diet.
99% of the magnesium in sugar cane is lost when it is refined to white sugar.
80 - 96% of magnesium content in wheat is removed when refined to white
flour. Magnesium is not added back to the soil, nor to "enriched flour"
after the germ and bran layer have been removed. 50% of the magnesium may
be lost during the cooking process into cooking water. The Asian diet, which
is whole-food based, typically provides 500 - 700 mg of magnesium per day,
while the Western diet provides one-third that amount.
B. Intestinal Absorption:
Consumption of soft drinks (pop or soda) decreases the body's absorption
of magnesium. In the intestines, the phosphoric acid in soft drinks
and the phosphates in baking powers combine with the magnesium to form magnesium
phosphate, an insoluble precipitate that is excreted through the feces.
The typical high-dairy, high
fat North American diet contains almost four times as much calcium
as magnesium. This unbalanced ration
coupled with the high fat content tends to suppress magnesium absorption.
Further, high levels of dietary or supplementary magnesium tend to suppress
calcium absorption.
Excessive supplemental calcium
taken to encourage bone growth in children and prevent osteoporosis in adults
leads to a decrease in magnesium absorption.
To maximize dietary absorption of magnesium, give up ice cream (which is
often high in sugar and fat), chocolate (high in sugar and fat), soft drinks
(high phosphate content), loud music (noise = stress), pizza (high in fat),
milk shakes (high in calcium, sugar and fat), and potato chips (high in
salt and fat). Does this sound like something the average American could
do?
C. Urinary and Fecal Magnesium Loss: Magnesium
can be recycled through the kidneys, with a 95% recovery rate. However,
alcohol promotes magnesium loss, as do
diets high in animal protein, sugar, sodium, and calcium. High
blood levels of adrenaline and cortisol (hormones released during stress)
cause serious urinary magnesium losses. Excessive noise and heat stress
also promotes urinary magnesium losses.
Blood Test for Magnesium
Level
60% of the magnesium in our bodies exists in our bones, 39% in our cells,
and only 1% in the blood. The correlation between blood magnesium and
intracellular levels is poor. Total body magnesium levels may decrease
20% during a fast, with no change in blood levels. While
low blood magnesium levels may correctly indicate serious disease, a "normal"
magnesium blood level by traditional laboratory test may exist concurrently
with a deficit in intracellular magnesium. No reliable test of
tissue magnesium level is currently available. An inconvenient, but accurate
method to measure magnesium levels is by a 24-hour urine measurement for
magnesium after intravenous magnesium loading. This is seldom done due to
patient compliance issues.
How Much Magnesium
Is Enough?
The National Research Council recommended minimum daily consumption for
magnesium is 150 - 250 mg for children under 10 years of age, and 300 -
400 mg for adults. Current statistics show that only 25% of surveyed populations
have a magnesium intake at or greater than the RDA. Almost 40% consume less
than 70% of the RDA. It is fair to say that the
majority of the North American population has a sub-optimal intake of magnesium.
RDA for magnesium is about 2 mg per pound body weight. The American diet
typically provides 1.2 - 1.5 mg per pound of body weight. Many magnesium
experts believe that an intake range of 2.7 - 4.5 mg per pound (about 400
- 700 mg a day) is optimal. Some on the
forefront of magnesium research are recommending up to 1000 mg per day for
healthy people, using the clinical symptom of diarrhea as a target marker.
Once the marker is achieved, magnesium intake can be reduced. Asians, for
example, are already taking 3 - 4.5 mg of magnesium per pound of body weight.
Common Symptoms
of Magnesium Deficiency
- Musculo-Skeletal Symptoms: osteoporosis, chronic
fatigue and weakness, muscle spasms, tics, tremors, and restlessness.
- Cardiovascular Symptoms: atherosclerosis,
cardiac arrhythmias, sudden death, and vasospasms.
- Female Issues: PMS (Premenstrual Syndrome)
and eclampsia.
- Psychiatric Symptoms: irritability, depression,
and bipolar disorders.
- Neurological Symptoms: migraine headaches,
excessive noise and pain sensitivity.
- Endocrine Symptoms: insulin resistance.
Clinical Uses of Magnesium
A.
Prevention and Management of Primary Postmenopausal osteoporosis ( PPMO)
The use of calcium supplementation for the management of Primary Postmenopausal
Osteoporosis (PPMO) has increased significantly since 1987, the year when
the National Institute of Health increased their recommended daily intake
of calcium to 1,500 mg for prevention of PPMO. This recommendation was made
in spite of the different conclusions made by some clinical studies presented
in the same proceedings. Results of some of these controlled studies presented
showed no significant effect of calcium intake on mineral density on trabecular
bone and only a slight effect on cortical bone. Since PPMO is predominately
due to demineralization of trabecular bone, there is no justification for
calcium mega-dosing in post-menopausal women. In fact, soft tissue calcification
can be a serious risk factor during calcium mega-dosing under certain conditions.
Certain investigators,
notably Dr. Guy Abraham, postulated that a total
dietary program emphasizing magnesium
instead of calcium for the management of PPMO would
be more effective for preventing bone loss. His
concerns about low magnesium for osteoporosis are similar to his concerns
for women with premenstrual tension syndrome.
To test Dr. Abraham's hypothesis, 19 postmenopausal women on hormonal replacement
were given a supplement consisting of 500 mg calcium (50% of RDA) and 600
mg of magnesium (200% of RDA). Serial bone density studies were conducted
every 3 months. Subjects receiving the treatment showed an 11% increase
in mean bone density versus 0.7% in the untreated group. Results also showed
that in postmenopausal women on hormonal
replacement therapy, the magnesium emphasized program resulted in a calcaneous
bone density 16 times greater than that of dietary advice alone.
At the start of the study, 15 subjects were below the fracture threshold.
After a year of treatment with magnesium supplementation, only 7 of them
were below the fracture threshold.
Researchers such as Dr. Abraham further postulate that PPMO is predominately
a skeletal manifestation of chronic magnesium deficiency, facilitated by
estrogen withdrawal during the postmenopausal period. He suggested raising
the RDA of magnesium to 1000 mg/day and lowering the RDA for calcium to
500 mg/day. His proposed daily intake for calcium
would be more in line with the World health Organization's "practical
allowance" of 400 - 500 mg daily for adults. Such a reversal of the
magnesium/calcium ratio would most probably lower the incidence and prevalence
of many other degenerative diseases as well.
B.
Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases (CVD)
Cardiovascular diseases have been often
been linked to magnesium depletion. One of the most alarming
trends in the past half-century is the sharp increase in sudden deaths from
ischemic heart diseases, particularly in middle-aged men who suddenly develop
myocardial infarction, cardiac arrhythmias, or cardiac arrest. It has been
postulated that magnesium deficiency may be a common etiologic factor.
Magnesium is found in high amounts in nuts like almonds and peanuts.
Research has found than nut lovers (those who eat nuts 5 times a week) have
half the chance of developing a heart attack compared to those who eat nuts
only once a week.
Epidemiological studies provide compelling evidence. The lower death rates
from coronary heart diseases (CHD) in Japan, China, India, and Italy versus
those in Europe and America point to differences in cholesterol and saturated
fat consumption as being the primary causative factor.
Not to be forgotten, and perhaps even more critical, is the role of dietary
salt in contributing to these differences in death rate. In
countries with lower CHD death rates, most of the magnesium comes from table
salt that is derived from seawater through an evaporative process. This
type of table salt contains calcium, potassium, and large amounts of magnesium,
in addition to the sodium. Table salt used by North Americans
comes primarily from salt mines. As a result of being washed with hydrochloric
acid and recrystallization, this purified salt contains almost pure sodium
chloride. The Japanese consume 10 grams of ocean salt a day. This provides
approximately 1500 mg of magnesium. This is almost four times the magnesium
recommended in the RDA and five times more than the average American gets.
People from the countries using sea salt
suffer a higher incidence of hypertension and stroke (probably due to the
higher sodium intake) but lower rate of CHD (probably due to their higher
magnesium intake). With increasing use of pure sodium chloride
in these countries over the past 20 years, it is interesting to note that
the incidence of CHD has increased accordingly.
A variety of cardiac arrhythmias have
been associated with magnesium dis-equilibrium, including ventricular tachycardias,
fibrillations, and ectopic beats. Coronary spasm is also a major pathogenic
feature of hypo-magnesemia. For patients with variant angina,
24-hour magnesium retention after intravenous magnesium loading was 60%,
while it was only 36% in control subjects. Substantial evidence has associated
magnesium deficiency with sudden cardiac death, a condition that claims
300,000 lives every year.
Deficiency in magnesium, aside from having a negative impact on the energy
production pathway required by mitochondria to generate ATP, also reduces
the threshold antioxidant capacity of the cardiovascular system and its
resistance to free-radical damage. Vitamin E has been found to have strong
protective properties against magnesium deficiency-induced myocardial lesions
and cardiomyopathy. Magnesium acts as
an antioxidant against free radical damage of the mitochondria. It has been
called nature's "calcium channel blocker" because of its ability
to prevent coronary artery spasm, arrhythmias, and to reduce blood pressure.
C.
Pre-menstrual Syndrome, Diabetes, Depression, and Chronic Fatigue
Women affected by premenstrual syndrome have been found
to have reduced magnesium levels. Since magnesium is a cofactor
in hundreds of enzymatic reactions, many of which govern cell membrane function,
it is easy to see how magnesium can play a fundamental role in multiple
organ systems, although there is no conclusive proof that links low magnesium
levels directly to PMS.
Magnesium plays the role of a second messenger
for insulin action. Insulin itself has been shown to be an important
regulatory factor for intracellular magnesium accumulation. Dietary magnesium
supplements have been shown to improve both insulin response and insulin
action in non-insulin dependent diabetics.
Magnesium also helps regulate nerve cell
function. Its presence in adequate amounts in the synaptic gap
between nerve cells controls the rate of neuron firing. Nerves fire easily
when magnesium levels are too low. The effect of this rapid firing is increased
sensitivity to stimulation of all kinds. Noise will sound excessively loud,
emotional reactions will be exaggerated, and the brain may be too stimulated
to sleep. Magnesium deficiency may cause excessive muscle tension (such
as spasms, tics, and restlessness) because magnesium is needed at the neuro-muscular
junction to allow muscles to relax. Chronic fatigue is another common clinical
entity associated with deficiency of magnesium.
A deficiency of magnesium can present
common psychiatric symptoms including depression, anxiety, restlessness,
and irritability. Depressed patients have been found to have
lower levels of magnesium. Oral supplementation of magnesium has been tried
as an adjunct treatment in psychiatric patients and been found to be successful
in rapidly cycling bipolar affective-disorders.
Discussion
Magnesium is perhaps the most under-appreciated
mineral in our lives. Over 75% of Americans are deficient, even
by the low standards set by the RDA. Physicians and anti-aging researchers
alike are now recognizing the growing clinical importance of magnesium.
Magnesium supplementation is recommended for healthy patients as well
as for those with osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, depression, diabetes,
chronic fatigue syndrome, premenstrual syndrome, and hypertension.
Magnesium
deficiency, at the intra-cellular level, is difficult to measure. Blood
tests using traditional laboratory methods do not give a good indication
of magnesium level from an optimum health and disease prevention perspective.
One's blood test can be "normal"
while the intracellular level is "deficient."
The decision to give magnesium supplementation should therefore rely on
evaluation on predisposing factors and symptoms. 100
- 200 mg supplemental magnesium with each meal (three
times a day) seems a reasonable and
safe recommendation for people with normal kidney function and for those
not regularly taking magnesium containing laxatives or antacids.
This level of supplementation, coupled with the average dietary magnesium
intake, would bring the total daily consumption in line with the 400 - 700
mg a day advocated by many researchers and nutritionally oriented clinicians
for optimum health.
About The Author
Michael Lam, M.D., M.P.H., A.B.A.A.M.
is a specialist in Preventive and Anti-Aging Medicine. He is currently the Director
of Medical Education at the Academy of Anti-Aging Research, U.S.A. He received
his Bachelor of Science degree from Oregon State University, and his Doctor
of Medicine degree from Loma Linda University School of Medicine, California.
He also holds a Masters of Public Health degree and is Board Certification
in Anti-aging Medicine by the American Board of Anti-Aging Medicine. Dr. Lam
pioneered the formulation of the three clinical phases of aging as well as the
concept of diagnosis and treatment of sub-clinical age related degenerative
diseases to deter the aging process. Dr. Lam has been published extensively
in this field. He is the author of The Five Proven Secrets to Longevity
(available on-line). He also serves as editor of the Journal of Anti-Aging
Research.
For More Information
For the latest anti-aging related health issues, visit Dr. Lam
at www.LamMD.com. Feel free to email
Dr. Lam at dr@LamMD.com if you have any questions.
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