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Re: Magnesium Confusion

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Mag taurate is good, and mag chloride is fine too. --V

At 11:39 PM 5/29/2011, you wrote:

>No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral

>laxative but not as a supplement. Very strong laxative effect.

>

>Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from what

>I can tell.

>

>Jaxi

>

>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha

><<mailto:micha3030@...>micha3030@...> wrote:

>

>

>I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>micha

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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magnesium malate is also good. it's what I take. Louise

I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

micha

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Yes, mag malate is particularly good for people with fibromyalgia because

it is a magnesium salt of malic acid, and malic acid is prescribed to help

with pain for fibro folks.

--

At 02:15 AM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

>magnesium malate is also good. it's what I take. Louise

>

>

>

>I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>micha

>

>

>

>------------------------------------

>

>All off topic posts should go to the IodineOT

>group IodineOT/

>

>

>The NEW MEMBER DOCUMENT (#1 on the list)

>iodine/files/01%20NEW%20MEMBERS%20-%20READ\

%20FIRST/

>

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 it interferes with the absorption of folic acid and iron ... The diarrhea caused by magnesium hydroxide carries away much of the body's supply of potassium, and failure to take extra potassium may lead to muscle cramps ... Only a small amount of the magnesium from milk of magnesia is usually absorbed from a person's intestine (unless the person is deficient in magnesium). However, magnesium is mainly excreted by the kidneys so longterm, daily consumption of milk of magnesia by someone suffering from renal failure could lead in theory to hypermagnesemia.

as with anything there are pros and cons ... I suppose how often it would be needed would be key

On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Louise Hill <loubob@...> wrote:

My mom's doctor told her to take 2 tb of Milk of Magnesia and prune juice for constipation.  I have always heard that it's not good to take.  I gave her a bottle of Mag. citrate ( calm ) to take but she took too much of it and had terrible stomach pains.  She's 95 and doesn't follow instructions well.  I wrote it out for her but she made a mistake and now wants to do as her doctor instructed her to do.  Can you tell me why Milk of Magnesia isn't good or is it okay?  I had heard not to take it.   

On May 30, 2011, at 12:39 AM, jaxi wrote:

 

No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral laxative but not as a supplement.  Very strong laxative effect.Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from what I can tell.

Jaxi On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha <micha3030@...> wrote:

I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

micha

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Psyllium husk and prunes and lots of water would be a better choice. I

know when someone is 95 getting them to do these things is difficult.

--

At 11:36 AM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

> it interferes with the absorption of folic acid and iron ... The

> diarrhea caused by magnesium hydroxide carries away much of the body's

> supply of potassium, and failure to take extra potassium may lead to

> muscle cramps ... Only a small amount of the magnesium from milk of

> magnesia is usually absorbed from a person's intestine (unless the person

> is deficient in magnesium). However, magnesium is mainly excreted by the

> kidneys so longterm, daily consumption of milk of magnesia by someone

> suffering from renal failure could lead in theory to hypermagnesemia.

>

>as with anything there are pros and cons ... I suppose how often it would

>be needed would be key

>

>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Louise Hill

><<mailto:loubob@...>loubob@...> wrote:

>

>

>My mom's doctor told her to take 2 tb of Milk of Magnesia and prune juice

>for constipation. I have always heard that it's not good to take. I gave

>her a bottle of Mag. citrate ( calm ) to take but she took too much of it

>and had terrible stomach pains. She's 95 and doesn't follow instructions

>well. I wrote it out for her but she made a mistake and now wants to do

>as her doctor instructed her to do. Can you tell me why Milk of Magnesia

>isn't good or is it okay? I had heard not to take it.

>On May 30, 2011, at 12:39 AM, jaxi wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral

>>laxative but not as a supplement. Very strong laxative effect.

>>

>>Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from

>>what I can tell.

>>

>>Jaxi

>>

>>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha

>><<mailto:micha3030@...>micha3030@...> wrote:

>>

>>

>>I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>>some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>>micha

>>

>>

>>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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good idea . Water is the key issue here. She has bladder issues and doesn't want to be embarrassed so she refuses to drink a lot of water or liquids. She will be 96 in a few weeks. You can't tell her anything she is very stubborn. She is very independent, still drives and will not do something you want her to do. Drives me nuts. Now I have to plot against what her doctor told her to do. LouiseOn May 30, 2011, at 2:22 PM, B wrote:

Psyllium husk and prunes and lots of water would be a better choice. I

know when someone is 95 getting them to do these things is difficult.

--

At 11:36 AM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

> it interferes with the absorption of folic acid and iron ... The

> diarrhea caused by magnesium hydroxide carries away much of the body's

> supply of potassium, and failure to take extra potassium may lead to

> muscle cramps ... Only a small amount of the magnesium from milk of

> magnesia is usually absorbed from a person's intestine (unless the person

> is deficient in magnesium). However, magnesium is mainly excreted by the

> kidneys so longterm, daily consumption of milk of magnesia by someone

> suffering from renal failure could lead in theory to hypermagnesemia.

>

>as with anything there are pros and cons ... I suppose how often it would

>be needed would be key

>

>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Louise Hill

><<mailto:loubob@...>loubob@...> wrote:

>

>

>My mom's doctor told her to take 2 tb of Milk of Magnesia and prune juice

>for constipation. I have always heard that it's not good to take. I gave

>her a bottle of Mag. citrate ( calm ) to take but she took too much of it

>and had terrible stomach pains. She's 95 and doesn't follow instructions

>well. I wrote it out for her but she made a mistake and now wants to do

>as her doctor instructed her to do. Can you tell me why Milk of Magnesia

>isn't good or is it okay? I had heard not to take it.

>On May 30, 2011, at 12:39 AM, jaxi wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral

>>laxative but not as a supplement. Very strong laxative effect.

>>

>>Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from

>>what I can tell.

>>

>>Jaxi

>>

>>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha

>><<mailto:micha3030@...>micha3030@...> wrote:

>>

>>

>>I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>>some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>>micha

>>

>>

>>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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ok, but something I've learned with my own mother is that, I can't live her

life for her. She was feeling a lot better when she was taking NAC (for

COPD), but she won't continue taking it, and refuses to see the

connection. My mother is younger than yours, and I still have had to come

to the conclusion that constantly trying to intervene in her life meant we

were fighting and she still didn't do what I suggested. So I've had to

accept that's just her life, I can't fix it, and try to have some quality

of life with her and not have our relationship constantly be a

struggle. That's the choice I've made. I still observe and make

suggestions, but I don't fight with her about it.

--

>good idea . Water is the key issue here. She has bladder issues

>and doesn't want to be embarrassed so she refuses to drink a lot of water

>or liquids. She will be 96 in a few weeks. You can't tell her anything

>she is very stubborn. She is very independent, still drives and will not

>do something you want her to do. Drives me nuts. Now I have to plot

>against what her doctor told her to do.

>Louise

>

>

>On May 30, 2011, at 2:22 PM, B wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>Psyllium husk and prunes and lots of water would be a better choice. I

>>know when someone is 95 getting them to do these things is difficult.

>>

>>--

>>

>>At 11:36 AM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

>>

>> > it interferes with the absorption of folic acid and iron ... The

>> > diarrhea caused by magnesium hydroxide carries away much of the body's

>> > supply of potassium, and failure to take extra potassium may lead to

>> > muscle cramps ... Only a small amount of the magnesium from milk of

>> > magnesia is usually absorbed from a person's intestine (unless the person

>> > is deficient in magnesium). However, magnesium is mainly excreted by the

>> > kidneys so longterm, daily consumption of milk of magnesia by someone

>> > suffering from renal failure could lead in theory to hypermagnesemia.

>> >

>> >as with anything there are pros and cons ... I suppose how often it would

>> >be needed would be key

>> >

>> >On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Louise Hill

>> ><<mailto:loubob@...><mailto:loubob%40cfl.rr.com>loubob@...

>> > wrote:

>> >

>> >

>> >My mom's doctor told her to take 2 tb of Milk of Magnesia and prune juice

>> >for constipation. I have always heard that it's not good to take. I gave

>> >her a bottle of Mag. citrate ( calm ) to take but she took too much of it

>> >and had terrible stomach pains. She's 95 and doesn't follow instructions

>> >well. I wrote it out for her but she made a mistake and now wants to do

>> >as her doctor instructed her to do. Can you tell me why Milk of Magnesia

>> >isn't good or is it okay? I had heard not to take it.

>> >On May 30, 2011, at 12:39 AM, jaxi wrote:

>> >

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral

>> >>laxative but not as a supplement. Very strong laxative effect.

>> >>

>> >>Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from

>> >>what I can tell.

>> >>

>> >>Jaxi

>> >>

>> >>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha

>> >><<mailto:micha3030@...><mailto:micha3030%40>micha3030@ya

>> hoo.com> wrote:

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>> >>some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>> >>micha

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>>

>>~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

>>--A.J. Muste

>

>

>

>

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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I agree 100%, you can only suggest and hope they follow but ultimately it's up to them. So far I've made progress slowly without a lot of hassles and without too many arguments by making suggestions. Money is a big issue with her even though she has enough she thinks she doesn't. I end up buying supplements for her and then she will sometimes take them.LouiseOn May 30, 2011, at 3:51 PM, B wrote:

ok, but something I've learned with my own mother is that, I can't live her

life for her. She was feeling a lot better when she was taking NAC (for

COPD), but she won't continue taking it, and refuses to see the

connection. My mother is younger than yours, and I still have had to come

to the conclusion that constantly trying to intervene in her life meant we

were fighting and she still didn't do what I suggested. So I've had to

accept that's just her life, I can't fix it, and try to have some quality

of life with her and not have our relationship constantly be a

struggle. That's the choice I've made. I still observe and make

suggestions, but I don't fight with her about it.

--

>good idea . Water is the key issue here. She has bladder issues

>and doesn't want to be embarrassed so she refuses to drink a lot of water

>or liquids. She will be 96 in a few weeks. You can't tell her anything

>she is very stubborn. She is very independent, still drives and will not

>do something you want her to do. Drives me nuts. Now I have to plot

>against what her doctor told her to do.

>Louise

>

>

>On May 30, 2011, at 2:22 PM, B wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>Psyllium husk and prunes and lots of water would be a better choice. I

>>know when someone is 95 getting them to do these things is difficult.

>>

>>--

>>

>>At 11:36 AM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

>>

>> > it interferes with the absorption of folic acid and iron ... The

>> > diarrhea caused by magnesium hydroxide carries away much of the body's

>> > supply of potassium, and failure to take extra potassium may lead to

>> > muscle cramps ... Only a small amount of the magnesium from milk of

>> > magnesia is usually absorbed from a person's intestine (unless the person

>> > is deficient in magnesium). However, magnesium is mainly excreted by the

>> > kidneys so longterm, daily consumption of milk of magnesia by someone

>> > suffering from renal failure could lead in theory to hypermagnesemia.

>> >

>> >as with anything there are pros and cons ... I suppose how often it would

>> >be needed would be key

>> >

>> >On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Louise Hill

>> ><<mailto:loubob@...><mailto:loubob%40cfl.rr.com>loubob@...

>> > wrote:

>> >

>> >

>> >My mom's doctor told her to take 2 tb of Milk of Magnesia and prune juice

>> >for constipation. I have always heard that it's not good to take. I gave

>> >her a bottle of Mag. citrate ( calm ) to take but she took too much of it

>> >and had terrible stomach pains. She's 95 and doesn't follow instructions

>> >well. I wrote it out for her but she made a mistake and now wants to do

>> >as her doctor instructed her to do. Can you tell me why Milk of Magnesia

>> >isn't good or is it okay? I had heard not to take it.

>> >On May 30, 2011, at 12:39 AM, jaxi wrote:

>> >

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral

>> >>laxative but not as a supplement. Very strong laxative effect.

>> >>

>> >>Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from

>> >>what I can tell.

>> >>

>> >>Jaxi

>> >>

>> >>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha

>> >><<mailto:micha3030@...><mailto:micha3030%40>micha3030@ya

>> hoo.com> wrote:

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>> >>some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>> >>micha

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>>

>>~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

>>--A.J. Muste

>

>

>

>

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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Yes, I bought her some supplements, things that would really improve her

quality of life, and she took them for a while until she felt better, then

decided she didn't need them. Or, that it's not ok for her to feel

good. Self-esteem issues.

Thanks for the exchange. Mom stuff is hard.

--

At 04:19 PM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

>I agree 100%, you can only suggest and hope they follow but ultimately

>it's up to them. So far I've made progress slowly without a lot of

>hassles and without too many arguments by making suggestions. Money is a

>big issue with her even though she has enough she thinks she doesn't. I

>end up buying supplements for her and then she will sometimes take them.

>

>Louise

>On May 30, 2011, at 3:51 PM, B wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>ok, but something I've learned with my own mother is that, I can't live her

>>life for her. She was feeling a lot better when she was taking NAC (for

>>COPD), but she won't continue taking it, and refuses to see the

>>connection. My mother is younger than yours, and I still have had to come

>>to the conclusion that constantly trying to intervene in her life meant we

>>were fighting and she still didn't do what I suggested. So I've had to

>>accept that's just her life, I can't fix it, and try to have some quality

>>of life with her and not have our relationship constantly be a

>>struggle. That's the choice I've made. I still observe and make

>>suggestions, but I don't fight with her about it.

>>

>>--

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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LOL ..... same here. They don't need them anymore when they start to feel better. I've heard those words before and I hope I never say them.LouiseOn May 31, 2011, at 1:23 AM, B wrote:

Yes, I bought her some supplements, things that would really improve her

quality of life, and she took them for a while until she felt better, then

decided she didn't need them. Or, that it's not ok for her to feel

good. Self-esteem issues.

Thanks for the exchange. Mom stuff is hard.

--

At 04:19 PM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

>I agree 100%, you can only suggest and hope they follow but ultimately

>it's up to them. So far I've made progress slowly without a lot of

>hassles and without too many arguments by making suggestions. Money is a

>big issue with her even though she has enough she thinks she doesn't. I

>end up buying supplements for her and then she will sometimes take them.

>

>Louise

>On May 30, 2011, at 3:51 PM, B wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>ok, but something I've learned with my own mother is that, I can't live her

>>life for her. She was feeling a lot better when she was taking NAC (for

>>COPD), but she won't continue taking it, and refuses to see the

>>connection. My mother is younger than yours, and I still have had to come

>>to the conclusion that constantly trying to intervene in her life meant we

>>were fighting and she still didn't do what I suggested. So I've had to

>>accept that's just her life, I can't fix it, and try to have some quality

>>of life with her and not have our relationship constantly be a

>>struggle. That's the choice I've made. I still observe and make

>>suggestions, but I don't fight with her about it.

>>

>>--

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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heh. It's honestly not as crazy as it sounds. I got feeling so good

behind iodine protocol and LDN that I unconsciously stopped taking them for

a couple of weeks over the holidays this past year without realizing

it. That's when I got some compassion for the problem. I've never had

this problem before, and now I actually am struggling to remember to take

my supplements and the med. It's so weird to find myself in this

predicament after decades of dedication to supplementation with few hitches.

--V

At 01:19 AM 5/31/2011, you wrote:

>LOL ..... same here. They don't need them anymore when they start

>to feel better. I've heard those words before and I hope I never say them.

>Louise

>On May 31, 2011, at 1:23 AM, B wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>Yes, I bought her some supplements, things that would really improve her

>>quality of life, and she took them for a while until she felt better, then

>>decided she didn't need them. Or, that it's not ok for her to feel

>>good. Self-esteem issues.

>>

>>Thanks for the exchange. Mom stuff is hard.

>>

>>--

>>

>>At 04:19 PM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

>>

>> >I agree 100%, you can only suggest and hope they follow but ultimately

>> >it's up to them. So far I've made progress slowly without a lot of

>> >hassles and without too many arguments by making suggestions. Money is a

>> >big issue with her even though she has enough she thinks she doesn't. I

>> >end up buying supplements for her and then she will sometimes take them.

>> >

>> >Louise

>> >On May 30, 2011, at 3:51 PM, B wrote:

>> >

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>ok, but something I've learned with my own mother is that, I can't

>> live her

>> >>life for her. She was feeling a lot better when she was taking NAC (for

>> >>COPD), but she won't continue taking it, and refuses to see the

>> >>connection. My mother is younger than yours, and I still have had to come

>> >>to the conclusion that constantly trying to intervene in her life meant we

>> >>were fighting and she still didn't do what I suggested. So I've had to

>> >>accept that's just her life, I can't fix it, and try to have some quality

>> >>of life with her and not have our relationship constantly be a

>> >>struggle. That's the choice I've made. I still observe and make

>> >>suggestions, but I don't fight with her about it.

>> >>

>> >>--

>>

>>~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

>>--A.J. Muste

>

>

>

>

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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I've been using Nigari, a version of Magnesium Chloride designed for setting

tofu. I find it cheaply in my local healthy food store. You can see an example

of a brand here:

http://www.lakecrystal.com.au/viewStory/Pink+Lake+Nigari+-+Product+Information

> >

> > Hey guys,

> > So there is all the messages i've been reading about Magnesium. Oxide is

harmful, use the oil, dont use the oil instead go with powder. Do I go with MG

chloride, potassium or citrate? Whats the difference? Some say liquid is best. I

am wondering if anyone has a set standard to be used in combo with Idoral. I am

taking a potassium supplement for to help with my low levels of potassium, I

dont know if that matters at all.

> >

> > Could someone rec. me a good one to use off of Iherb.com?

> >

> > Also dosages seems to be all over the map, depending on which form you take.

> >

>

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Your mom is almost 96 years old? She lived this long, just leave her be to live her life the way she wants to. She's obviously has been doing something right for herself. If she wants to take milk of mag., let her. It won't kill her. From: B <vbaker@...>iodine Sent: Mon, May 30, 2011 2:51:01

PMSubject: Re: Magnesium Confusion

ok, but something I've learned with my own mother is that, I can't live her

life for her. She was feeling a lot better when she was taking NAC (for

COPD), but she won't continue taking it, and refuses to see the

connection. My mother is younger than yours, and I still have had to come

to the conclusion that constantly trying to intervene in her life meant we

were fighting and she still didn't do what I suggested. So I've had to

accept that's just her life, I can't fix it, and try to have some quality

of life with her and not have our relationship constantly be a

struggle. That's the choice I've made. I still observe and make

suggestions, but I don't fight with her about it.

--

>good idea . Water is the key issue here. She has bladder issues

>and doesn't want to be embarrassed so she refuses to drink a lot of water

>or liquids. She will be 96 in a few weeks. You can't tell her anything

>she is very stubborn. She is very independent, still drives and will not

>do something you want her to do. Drives me nuts. Now I have to plot

>against what her doctor told her to do.

>Louise

>

>

>On May 30, 2011, at 2:22 PM, B wrote:

>

>>

>>

>>Psyllium husk and prunes and lots of water would be a better choice. I

>>know when someone is 95 getting them to do these things is difficult.

>>

>>--

>>

>>At 11:36 AM 5/30/2011, you wrote:

>>

>> > it interferes with the absorption of folic acid and iron ... The

>> > diarrhea caused by magnesium hydroxide carries away much of the body's

>> > supply of potassium, and failure to take extra potassium may lead to

>> > muscle cramps ... Only a small amount of the magnesium from milk of

>> > magnesia is usually absorbed from a person's intestine (unless the person

>> > is deficient in magnesium). However, magnesium is mainly excreted by the

>> > kidneys so longterm, daily consumption of milk of magnesia by someone

>> > suffering from renal failure could lead in theory to hypermagnesemia.

>> >

>> >as with anything there are pros and cons ... I suppose how often it would

>> >be needed would be key

>> >

>> >On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Louise Hill

>> ><<mailto:loubob@...><mailto:loubob%40cfl.rr.com>loubob@...

>> > wrote:

>> >

>> >

>> >My mom's doctor told her to take 2 tb of Milk of Magnesia and prune juice

>> >for constipation. I have always heard that it's not good to take. I gave

>> >her a bottle of Mag. citrate ( calm ) to take but she took too much of it

>> >and had terrible stomach pains. She's 95 and doesn't follow instructions

>> >well. I wrote it out for her but she made a mistake and now wants to do

>> >as her doctor instructed her to do. Can you tell me why Milk of Magnesia

>> >isn't good or is it okay? I had heard not to take it.

>> >On May 30, 2011, at 12:39 AM, jaxi wrote:

>> >

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral

>> >>laxative but not as a supplement. Very strong laxative effect.

>> >>

>> >>Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from

>> >>what I can tell.

>> >>

>> >>Jaxi

>> >>

>> >>On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha

>> >><<mailto:micha3030@...><mailto:micha3030%40>micha3030@ya

>> hoo.com> wrote:

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>> >>some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>> >>micha

>> >>

>> >>

>> >>

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>> >

>>

>>~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

>>--A.J. Muste

>

>

>

>

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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I am surprised to read this about MOM because I have been using it for a

magnesium supplement. I add the MOM to ACV and then add some of the mixed

solution to a quart of water and drink that through the day for a form of

magnesium that is used instantly in the bloodstream. It was highly

recommended to me by an herbalist. Are we talking about the same thing? GL

it interferes with the absorption of folic acid and iron ... The

diarrhea caused

by magnesium hydroxide carries away much of the body's supply of potassium,

and failure to take extra potassium may lead to muscle cramps ... Only a

small amount of the magnesium from milk of magnesia is usually absorbed from

a person's intestine (unless the person is deficient in magnesium). However,

magnesium is mainly excreted by the kidneys so longterm, daily consumption

of milk of magnesia by someone suffering from renal failure could lead in

theory to hypermagnesemia.

as with anything there are pros and cons ... I suppose how often it would be

needed would be key

On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:54 PM, Louise Hill <loubob@...> wrote:

>

>

> My mom's doctor told her to take 2 tb of Milk of Magnesia and prune juice

> for constipation. I have always heard that it's not good to take. I gave

> her a bottle of Mag. citrate ( calm ) to take but she took too much of it

> and had terrible stomach pains. She's 95 and doesn't follow instructions

> well. I wrote it out for her but she made a mistake and now wants to do

> as

> her doctor instructed her to do. Can you tell me why Milk of Magnesia

> isn't

> good or is it okay? I had heard not to take it.

> On May 30, 2011, at 12:39 AM, jaxi wrote:

>

>

>

> No, mag sulfate is usually used as a bath soak and sometimes as an oral

> laxative but not as a supplement. Very strong laxative effect.

>

> Mag citrate and Mag glycinate are the preferred supplement forms from what

> I can tell.

>

> Jaxi

>

> On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:52 PM, m micha <micha3030@...> wrote:

>

>>

>>

>> I just wanted to know if taking magnesium sulfat internally is as good as

>> some of the other magnesium mentioned in this forum?

>> micha

>>

>>

>>

>

>

>

>

>

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Those pill containers labeled with the days of the weeks are helpful to me to remember my supplements, my DH's supplements, and I even have one for the hypo dog! Carol

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