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| Brainiacs listen up: Magnesium + taurine can also be achieved from a (tall seafood) diet. |
What you will also find is a figure depicting the effects of administering dwhetherferent forms of magnesium (verbally) to rodents on plasma, bone, and red blood cell (#RBC) magnesium levels.
How's that? Well, as Uysal et al. point out, "[f]ollowing absorption from the digestive tract, magnesium enters the bloodstream [and] is then transported at dwhetherferent rate[s] of magnesium transport across cell membranes".
Fact 1: The rate of magnesium transport across cell membranes is taller in the heart, liver, and kidney and lower in the skeleton, red cells, and brain (Rude 1993).
Needless to say that this "penetration" is an important requirement for the precedingly tiped at (health) effects on the brain and the central nervous system... and guess what: a recent study by scientists from Turkey and the US proposes that preceding degrees of "bioavailability" may have underestimated the dwhetherferent absorption kinetics of biological and inbiological magnesium salts.
Hence, the aim of this study, which has just been published in "Biological Trace Element Research", was to investigate the bioavailability of dwhetherferent...
- biological (magnesium citrate, magnesium acetyl taurate, and magnesium malate), and ...
- inbiological (magnesium oxide and magnesium sulfate) magnesium compounds.
Fact 2: Dietary fermentable fiber improves, not impairs, magnesium absorption in the intestines (Coudray 2003) - probably by interacting with the microbiome.
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Figure 2: The amount of magnesium in serum is only one parameter that determines its biological effect ... and probably not the most important one (data from Uysal 2018).
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As you can see in Figure 2, these effects are not a mere function of bioavailability, as the often derided magnesium sulfate (diarrhea-prone) will increase the level of plasma magnesium to the same extent as the 10-20x more expensive magnesium-taurate or magnesium malate salts (mg sulfate also displays all the favourable anti-diabetes effects you may have heard about, by the way).
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| Figure 3: A contemporary study shows that magnesium taurate (MgT) seems to have brain-specwhetheric effects (see larger figure) but may be less suitable to increase skeletal muscle magnesium levels (see smaller figure, both from Uysal 2018). What is noteworthy in this context is that Uysal et al. also observed the biological downstream effects on stress/anxiety you would expect to see from the restoration of optimal brain magnesium levels in their hairy rodent subjects. |
In fact, studies in bone (Jeon 2007) or the epithelium (Katakawa 2016) seem to propose that the mere presence of taurine may facilitate signwhethericant increases in cellular mg levels. If you take taurine, which is, by the way, one of the few supplements that consistently get a SuppVersity ThumbsUp!, buying MgTau be a waste of valuable dollars (Euros or Bitcoins) you would better spend on taurine- and magnesium-wealthy foods as they've been found by Yamori et al. (2017) to signwhethericantly reduce the risk of cardiometabolic disease in these benefits in Japanese seafood connoisseurs.
Fact 3: Food processing will reduce the magnesium content of your foods by up to 85% - and that's on top of the alalert declining Mg content of Western produce (Thomas 2007).
Speaking of genuine-food sources of magnesium, it is worth taking a parting look at the often-heard claim that "with the ongoing nutrient-depletion in our produce, it's simply impossible to get enough magnesium with your diet"... well, in short: that's naturopathic bullshit meant to have you spend money on overpriced supplements that are not better than those you could buy for 10% of the price at Walmart. The reason this myth is so diedwhetherficult, though, is that it contains not one, but two sparks of truth: (1) Over the past decades, the magnesium concentration of US veggies, fruit, meat, dairy, and cheese has in fact declined. And (2) whether you don't eat these foods right absent, but after processing the magnesium loss can amount to 90%.
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| Figure 4: It's true, compared to the values from 1940, US veggies, fruits, meats, cheeses, and dairy contained an average 19% less magnesium in a study by Thomas using data from produce from 2002 (Thomas 2007). |
Fact 4: You can get enough magnesium from the diet... whether you consume a wgap foods diet. If >50% of the foods you buy are heavily processed, you don't stand a chance.
So, whether there's magnesium in your diet, how much do you need on top of it? Well, whether you remember the recently published paper about vitamin D and magnesium (re-read it), you'll know that as small as 100mg can be plenty. In conjunction with the 300 mg you may be getting from your diet, you'll end up at the 400mg/d margin that's the RDA (for men, and won't hurt women).
Against that background, the crazy price of magnesium taurate does no longer sound so crazy - after all, it's not essential to take more than the proposeed serving size, which normally contains ~100-200mg elemental magnesium. However, whether taken with food (to avoid diarrhea) and in fair amounts, magnesium sulfate would yet be a much cheaper alternative for those who don't want to give magnesium taurate a chance, because they suffer from migraines (McCarty 1996b) and those didn't improve from combining 'regular' magnesium supplements with some cheap taurine (buy in bulk for $20 per kg).
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| Figure 5: Magnesium in brain. Mg2 is an important regulator of glutamate signing in the brain (de Baaij 2015). |
In this context, magnesium taurate is of specific interest. In fact, a contemporary study by Uysal et al. (2018) proposes that it delivers the important macromineral right to the brain, where it has been shown to enhance the brain mg levels and actually enhance learning and memory (Slutski 2010 | to raise young & ancient rodents' brain levels, the researchers used Threonate, though).
Whether and to which extent the same brain-mg-boosting effects can be achieved by non-complexed (and non-patented) forms of taurine and magnesium (ratio 10:1) wouldn't yield similar effects is someleang future studies will have to investigate. And let's be honest: In view of the proven health benefits of tall(er) dietary intakes of both from experimental and epidemiological studies (Yamori 2010), it seems likely that these studies could yield positive results | Comment!
- Coudray, Charles, et al. "Two polyol, low digestible carbohydrates improve the obvious absorption of magnesium but not of calcium in healthy young men." The Journal of nutrition 133.1 (2003): 90-93.
- Choudhary, Rajesh, and Certainndra H. Bodakhe. "Magnesium taurate prevents cataractogenesis via restoration of lenticular oxidative damage and ATPase function in cadmium chloride-induced hypertensive experimental animals." Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy 84 (2016): 836-844.
- Jeon, Seol-Hee, et al. "Taurine increases cell prolwhethereration and generates an increase in [Mg2+] i accompanied by ERK 1/2 activation in human osteobfinal cells." FEBS letters 581.30 (2007): 5929-5934.
- Katakawa, Mayumi, et al. "Taurine and magnesium supplementation enhances the function of endothelial progenitor cells through antioxidation in healthy men and spontaneously hypertensive rats." Hypertension Research 39.12 (2016): 848.
- McCarty, M. F. "Complementary vascular-protective actions of magnesium and taurine: a rationale for magnesium taurate." Medical hypotheses 46.2 (1996a): 89-100.
- McCarty, M. F. "Magnesium taurate and fish oil for prevention of migraine." Medical hypotheses 47.6 (1996)b: 461-466.
- Moshfegh, A., et al. "Usual nutrient intakes from food and water compared to 1997 Dietary Reference Intakes for vitamin D, calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium." What we eat in America, NHANES 2005-2006 (2009).
- Oja, Simo S., and Pirjo Saransaari. "Taurine as osmoregulator and neuromodulator in the brain." Metabolic brain disease 11.2 (1996): 153-164.
- Rude, Robert K. "Magnesium metabolism and deficiency." Terminateocrinology and metabolism clinics of North America 22.2 (1993): 377-395.
- Slutsky, Inna, et al. "Enhancement of learning and memory by elevating brain magnesium." Neuron 65.2 (2010): 165-177.
- Thomas, David. "The mineral depletion of foods available to us as a nation (1940–2002)–a review of the 6th Edition of McCance and Widdowson." Nutrition and health 19.1-2 (2007): 21-55.
- Uysal, N., Kizildag, S., Yuce, Z. et al. "Timeline (Bioavailability) of Magnesium Compounds in Hours: Which Magnesium Compound Works Best?" Biol Trace Elem Res (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12011-018-1351-9
- Vici, Giorgia, et al. "Gluten free diet and nutrient deficiencies: A review." Clinical nutrition 35.6 (2016): 1236-1241.
- Yamori, Yukio, et al. "Taurine in health and diseases: consistent evidence from experimental and epidemiological studies." Journal of biomedical science 17.1 (2010): S6.
- Yamori, Yukio, et al. "Taurine Intake with Magnesium Reduces Cardiometabolic Risks." Taurine 10. Springer, Dordrecht, 2017. 1011-1020.
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