Magnesium for health & your cannabis high
I have been doing some research lately,
and have come to the opinion that magnesium levels in the
body can have a profound impact on the quality of the high from
Cannabis.
If you are a healthy person with good levels of
magnesium in your body, your high is optimised due to the fine tuning Magnesium
gives to your nerves and cannabinoid receptors.
A lot of cannabis users may
not have good magnesium levels, due to poor diet or ill health, and they will
often find the zing has gone out of their high.I have added a rewiew on
Magnesium in the human body for you to read.
MAGNESIUM
CHLORIDE
For Health and Rejuvenation
Magnesium is nothing
short of a miracle mineral in its healing effect on a wide range of diseases as
well as in its ability to rejuvenate the aging body. We know that it is
essential for many enzyme reactions, especially in regard to cellular energy
production, for the health of the brain and nervous system and also for healthy
teeth and bones. However, it may come as a surprise that in the form of
magnesium chloride it is also an impressive infection fighter.
The first
prominent researcher to investigate and promote the antibiotic effects of
magnesium was a French surgeon, Prof. Pierre Delbet MD. In 1915 he was looking
for a solution to cleanse wounds of soldiers, because he found that
traditionally used antiseptics actually damaged tissues and encouraged
infections instead of preventing them. In all his tests magnesium chloride
solution was by far the best. Not only was it harmless for tissues, but it also
greatly increased leucocyte activity and phagocytosis, the destruction of
microbes.
Later Prof. Delbet also performed experiments with the
internal applications of magnesium chloride and found it to be a powerful
immune-stimulant. In his experiments phagocytosis increased by up to
333%. This means after magnesium chloride intake the same number of
white blood cells destroyed up to three times more microbes than beforehand.
Gradually Prof. Delbet found magnesium chloride to be beneficial in a
wide range of diseases. These included diseases of the digestive tract such as
colitis and gall bladder problems, Parkinson's disease, tremors and muscle
cramps; acne, eczema, psoriasis, warts and itching skin; impotence, prostatic
hypertrophy, cerebral and circulatory problems; asthma, hay fever, urticaria and
anaphylactic reactions. Hair and nails became stronger and healthier and
patients had more energy.
Prof. Delbet also found a very good
preventative effect on cancer and cured pre-cancerous conditions such as
leukoplasia, hyperkeratosis and chronic mastitis. Epidemiological studies
confirmed that regions with magnesium-rich soil had less cancer than those with
low magnesium levels.
Another French doctor, A. Neveu, cured several
diphtheria patients with magnesium chloride within two days. He also published
15 cases of poliomyelitis that were cured within days if treatment was started
immediately, or within months if paralysis had already progressed. Neveu also
found magnesium chloride effective with asthma, bronchitis, pneumonia and
emphysema; pharyngitis, tonsillitis, hoarseness, common cold, influenza,
whooping cough, measles, rubella, mumps, scarlet fever; poisoning,
gastro-enteritis, boils, abscesses, whitlow, infected wounds and osteomyelitis.
In more recent years Dr Vergini and others have confirmed these earlier
results and have added more diseases to the list of successful uses: acute
asthma attacks, shock, tetanus, herpes zoster, acute and chronic conjunctivitis,
optic neuritis, rheumatic diseases, many allergic diseases, Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome and beneficial effects in cancer therapy. In all of these cases
magnesium chloride had been used and gave much better results than other
magnesium compounds.
Magnesium for Nerves
Magnesium has a
calming effect on the nervous system. With this, it is frequently used to
promote good sleep. But more importantly, it can be used to calm irritated and
over-excited nerves. This is especially useful with epileptic seizures,
convulsions in pregnant women and the 'shakes' in alcoholism. Magnesium levels
are generally low in alcoholics, contributing or causing many of their health
problems. If magnesium levels are low, the nerves lose control over muscle
activity, respiration and mental processes. Nervous fatigue, tics and twitches,
tremors, irritability, hypersensitivity, muscle spasms, restlessness, anxiety,
confusion, disorientation and irregular heartbeat all respond to increased
magnesium levels. A common phenomenon of magnesium deficiency is a sharp muscle
reaction to an unexpected loud noise. 'Memory pills' have been marketed that
consist mainly of magnesium.
Many of the symptoms of Parkinson's disease
can be overcome with high magnesium supplementation, shaking can be prevented
and rigidity eased. With preeclampsia pregnant women may develop convulsions,
nausea, dizziness and headaches. In hospitals this is treated with magnesium
infusions. Because of its strong relaxing effect, magnesium helps not only to
have a better sleep but is also useful in overcoming headaches and migraines.
Even the number of suicides are linked to magnesium deficiency. The lower the
magnesium content in soil and water in a given region, the higher are the rates
of suicides.
Epilepsy is marked by abnormally low magnesium levels in
the blood, spinal fluid and brain, causing hyperexcitability in regions of the
brain. There are many reported causes of epilepsy greatly improving or
disappearing with magnesium supplementation. In a trial with 30 epileptics 450
mg of magnesium supplied daily successfully controlled seizures. Another study
found that the lower the magnesium blood levels the more severe was the
epilepsy. In most cases magnesium works best in combination with vitamin B6 and
zinc. In sufficient concentrations, magnesium inhibits convulsions by limiting
or slowing the spread of the electric discharge from an isolated group of brain
cells to the rest of the brain. Animal studies show that even the initial burst
of firing nerve cells that starts an epileptic attack can be suppressed with
magnesium.
Magnesium for the Heart
Adequate levels of
magnesium are essential for the heart muscle. Those who die from heart attacks
have very low magnesium but high calcium levels in their heart muscles. Patients
with coronary heart disease who have been treated with large amounts of
magnesium survived better than those with drug treatment. Magnesium dilates the
arteries of the heart and lowers cholesterol and fat levels.
High
calcium levels, on the other hand, constrict the heart arteries and increase the
risk of heart attacks. Calcium deposits in the walls of the arteries contribute
to the development of arteriosclerosis. The arteries become hard and rigid,
thereby restricting the blood flow and causing high blood pressure. In addition,
such inelastic blood vessels may easily rapture and cause strokes. Countries
with the highest calcium to magnesium ratios (high calcium and low magnesium
levels) in soil and water have the highest incidence of cardiovascular disease.
At the top of the list is Australia.
Worldwide the intake of magnesium
has been lowered and that of calcium increased because of the heavy use of
fertilisers high in calcium and low in magnesium. With this, the intake of
magnesium from our food has steadily declined in the last fifty years, while the
use of calcium-rich fertilisers and cardiovascular diseases have greatly
increased at the same time.
Diabetics are prone to atherosclerosis,
fatty degeneration of the liver and heart disease. Diabetics have low magnesium
tissue levels. They often develop eye problems - retinopathy. Diabetics with the
lowest magnesium levels had the most severe retinopathy. The lower the magnesium
content of their water, the higher is the death rate of diabetics from
cardiovascular disease. In an American study the death rate due to diabetes was
four times higher in areas with low magnesium water levels as compared to areas
with high levels of magnesium in the water.
Magnesium for Healthy Bones
and Teeth
Medical authorities claim that the widespread incidence of
osteoporosis and tooth decay in western countries can be prevented with a high
calcium intake. However, published evidence reveals that the opposite is true.
Asian and African populations with a very low intake of about 300 mg of calcium
daily have very little osteoporosis. Bantu women with an intake of 200 to 300 mg
of calcium daily have the lowest incidence of osteoporosis in the world. In
western countries with a high intake of dairy products the average calcium
intake is about 1000 mg. The higher the calcium intake, especially in the form
of cows' milk products (except butter) the higher the incidence of osteoporosis.
Calcium, magnesium and phosphorus levels are kept in a seesaw balance by
the parathyroid hormones. If calcium goes up, magnesium goes down and vice
versa. With a low magnesium intake, calcium goes out of the bones to increase
tissue levels, while a high magnesium intake causes calcium to go out of the
tissues into the bones. A high phosphorus intake without a high calcium or
magnesium intake causes calcium to leach from the bones and leave the body with
the urine. A high phosphorus intake with high calcium and magnesium leads to
bone mineralisation.
Dr Barnett, an orthopaedic surgeon practised in two
different U.S. Counties with very different soil and water mineral levels. In
Dallas County with a high calcium and low magnesium concentration osteoporosis
and hip fractures were very common, while in Hereford with high magnesium and
low calcium these were nearly absent. In Dallas County the magnesium content of
bones was 0.5% while in Hereford it was 1.76%. In another comparison the
magnesium content in bones of osteoporosis sufferers was 0.62% while in healthy
individuals it was 1.26%.
The same applies for healthy teeth. In a New
Zealand study it was found that caries-resistant teeth had on average twice the
amount of magnesium as caries-prone teeth. The average concentration of
magnesium phosphate in bones is given as about 1%, in teeth about 1.5%, in
elephant tusks 2% and in the teeth of carnivorous animals made to crush bones it
is 5%. In regard to the strength of bones and teeth think of calcium as chalk
and of magnesium as superglue. The magnesium superglue binds and transforms the
chalk into superior bones and teeth.
Cancer and Aging
Many
studies have shown an increased cancer rate in regions with low magnesium levels
in soil and drinking water. In Egypt the cancer rate was only about 10% of that
in Europe and America. In the rural fellah it was practically non-existent. The
main difference was an extremely high magnesium intake of 2.5 to 3 g in these
cancer-free populations, ten times more than in most western countries.
Dr Seeger and Dr Budwig in Germany have shown that cancer is mainly the
result of a faulty energy metabolism in the powerhouses of the cells, the
mitochondria. A similar decline in energy production takes place when we age.
The great majority of enzymes involved in the production of energy require
magnesium. A healthy cell has high magnesium and low calcium levels. Up to 30%
of the energy of cells is used to pump calcium out of the cells. The higher the
calcium level and the lower the magnesium level in the extra-cellular fluid, the
harder is it for cells to pump the calcium out. The result is that with low
magnesium levels the mitochondria gradually calcify and energy production
decreases. We may say that our biochemical age is determined by the ratio of
magnesium to calcium within our cells. Test with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome showed
that magnesium supplementation resulted in better energy levels.
We use
our muscles by selectively contracting them. On the biochemical level muscle
contraction is triggered by calcium ions flowing into muscle cells. To relax the
muscle calcium is pumped out again. However, as we age, more and more calcium
remains trapped in the muscles and these become more or less permanently
contracted, leading to increasing muscle tension and spasms. Together with
calcification of the joints, this is the typical rigidity and inflexibility of
old age. The higher our intake of calcium relative to magnesium, the faster do
we calcify and age. Most of the excess calcium in our diet ends up in our soft
tissues and around joints leading to calcification with arthritic deformations,
arteriosclerosis, cataracts, kidney stones and senility. Dr Seyle proved
experimentally that biochemical stress can lead to the pathological
calcification of almost any organ. The more stress, the more calcification, the
more rapid the aging.
The Rejuvenation Mineral
In addition to
its anti-microbial and immune-stimulating properties, both magnesium as well as
chloride have other important functions in keeping us young and healthy.
Chloride, of course, is required to produce a large quantity of gastric acid
each day and is also needed to stimulate starch-digesting enzymes. Magnesium is
the mineral of rejuvenation and prevents the calcification of our organs and
tissues that is characteristic of the old-age related degeneration of our body.
Using other magnesium salts is less advantageous because these have to
be converted into chlorides in the body anyway. We may use magnesium as oxide or
carbonate but then we need to produce additional hydrochloric acid to absorb
them. Many aging individuals, especially with chronic diseases who desperately
need more magnesium cannot produce sufficient hydrochloric acid and then cannot
absorb the oxide or carbonate. Epsom salt is magnesium sulphate. It is soluble
but not well absorbed and acts mainly as a laxative. Chelated magnesium is well
absorbed but much more expensive and lacks the beneficial contribution of the
chloride ions. Orotates are good but very expensive for the amount of magnesium
that they provide and both orotates and chelates seem to lack the
infection-fighting potential of the magnesium chloride.
Calcium and
magnesium are opposites in their effects on our body structure. As a general
rule, the softer our body structure the more we need calcium, while the more
rigid and inflexible it is, the less calcium and the more magnesium we need.
Magnesium can reverse the age-related degenerative calcification of our body
structure and with this help us to rejuvenate.
Young women, children and
most of all babies have soft body structures and smooth skin with low calcium
and high magnesium levels in their cells and soft tissues. This is the
biochemistry of youth. As we age and most pronounced in old men and
post-menopausal women, we become more and more inflexible. The arteries harden
to cause arteriosclerosis, the skeletal system calcifies to cause rigidity with
fusion of the spine and joints, kidneys and other organs and glands increasingly
calcify and harden with stone formation, calcification in the eyes causes
cataracts and even the skin hardens, becoming tough and wrinkled. In this way
calcium is in the same league as oxygen and free radicals, while magnesium works
together with hydrogen and the antioxidants to keep our body structure soft.
A gynaecologist reported that one of the first organs to calcify are the
ovaries, leading to pre-menstrual tension. When he put his patients on a high
magnesium intake their PMT vanished and they felt and looked much younger. Most
of these women said that they lost weight, increased their energy, felt less
depressed and enjoyed sex again much more than before. For men it is equally
beneficial for problems arising from an enlarged prostate gland. Symptoms
commonly disappear after a period of supplementation with magnesium chloride.
Increased magnesium intake has also been shown to be an effective way to
prevent or dissolve kidney stones and gall bladder stones, the latter best in
combination with a high lecithin intake. Activation of digestive enzymes and
bile production as well as helping to restore a healthy intestinal flora may be
the factors that make magnesium chloride so beneficial in normalising our
digestive processes, reducing any digestive discomfort, bloating and offensive
stool odours. This is in line with a reduction of all offensive body odours,
including underarm and foot odour.
Prof. Delbet used to give magnesium
chloride solution routinely to his patients with infections and for several days
before any planned surgery and was surprised by many of these patients
experiencing euphoria and bursts of energy. Magnesium chloride supposedly has a
specific action on the tetanus virus and its effects on the body. It even seems
to be protective against snakebites. Guinea pigs did not die after normally
lethal injections of snake venom and a rabbit survived a poisonous snakebite
when given magnesium chloride solution.
In addition to being the most
essential mineral in our cellular energy production, magnesium is also needed
for the ingested B-vitamins to become metabolically active. Magnesium is also
essential for the synthesis of nucleic acids, for cell division to occur, for
DNA and RNA synthesis of our genetic material, for protein as well as fatty acid
synthesis. Unfortunately magnesium deficiency at a cellular level where it
counts is not easy to diagnose, as serum magnesium levels do not correlate to
muscle or cellular magnesium levels. Instead of trying difficult tissue
magnesium analysis to find out if your health problems may be due to low
magnesium levels, it is much easier and more effective just to take more
magnesium and see what happens.
Rejuvenation by ingesting more magnesium
is a slow process, especially as the amount of magnesium that we can take is
limited by its laxative effect and the need to keep it in a reasonable balance
with the calcium and phosphorus intake. The other problem is that spastic
muscles have a poor blood and lymph circulation, which makes it difficult for
the ingested magnesium to dissolve and flush out the tissue and joint
calcifications. Therefore, we can greatly speed up the rejuvenation process by
increasing the circulation through permanently contracted muscles as with deep
tissue massage, hot and cold water applications, relaxation exercises,
lymphasising as well as packs and rubs with magnesium chloride or Epsom salts.
How much?
Hydrated magnesium chloride contains about 120 mg of
magnesium per gram or 600 mg per rounded teaspoon. It has a mild laxative
effect. As a good maintenance intake to remain healthy you may take a teaspoon
daily in divided doses with meals, best use it instead of table salt, it has a
somewhat salty taste. With raised blood pressure and symptoms of magnesium
deficiency you may temporarily increase this to 2 teaspoons daily in divided
doses. This may already cause 'loose stools' in some but that is generally
beneficial. However, with low blood pressure additional calcium may be required
together with about 300 mg of magnesium supplement for a ratio of two parts of
calcium to one part of magnesium.
Individuals with very sensitive taste
buds may start using it in tiny amounts mixed with strongly flavoured food and
increase doses very gradually. Alternatively, drink it in one gulp dissolved in
water while pinching your nose and quickly drink something pleasant afterwards.
With acute infections dissolve 40 g or 8 slightly rounded teaspoons in 1
litre of water. With children commonly a small glassful or 125 ml has been used
every 6 hours. Adults may double this dose by drinking this amount every 3 hours
or even more until diarrhoea develops and then cut back to a maintenance intake
just below the level of diarrhoea until the infection has cleared.
For
daily use it may be more convenient as well to dissolve the magnesium chloride
in water. You may dissolve 10 lightly rounded teaspoons of the crystals in a
medium size glass of water or, more accurately, 50g in 150 ml of water. Decant
and discard any undissolved residue. Mix one teaspoon of this solution three
times daily with food or drink for a daily intake of about 600 mg of magnesium.
This or a more concentrated solution may also be used as a pack over tumours and
infected, inflamed, painful, stiff or calcified joints, muscles, adhesions or
scar tissue. It is also excellent as a back rub and to relax tense muscles
anywhere and even to rejuvenate ageing skin. For sensitive skin use it in a very
diluted form. On wounds it was commonly used in a 4% solution, that is 4 g or a
level teaspoon in 100 ml or a small glass of water.
For quickest results
with insensitive skin use a friction massage: rub hard enough so that the skin
becomes hot and red. After doing this for several days a rash may develop over
the area and the skin becomes very sensitive. When this happens moisten the skin
only lightly with a much diluted magnesium chloride solution or soothe it with
the contents of a vitamin E oil capsule. Repeat the rubbing if necessary after
the skin has healed.
For general relaxation as well as for back pain and
arthritic or muscle pain and stiffness the cheaper Epsom salts may be used. It
is excellent to soak in a hot bath with the addition of about 1 kg of Epsom
salts. Also hot Epsom salt packs may be used over stiff or painful muscles and
joints. Keep warm for one to two hours with a hot water bottle.
There is
also a non-hydrated or desiccated magnesium chloride available that contains
approximately twice as much magnesium as the hydrated product. If using this
then just half the amounts indicated above. It is now also available in tablet
form but more expensive.
Instead of magnesium chloride, you may use the
brine from the production of sea salt. It has the advantage of having more trace
minerals than the technical magnesium chloride, but due to its high content of
magnesium sulphate it is also much more bitter. In Australia it is available as
'sea minerals'.
While a higher magnesium intake is beneficial for most
individuals, those with low blood pressure usually require more calcium in
addition. Normal blood pressure is about 120/80; the lower it is the higher
should be the daily intake of calcium. While those with high blood pressure
benefit from ingesting twice as much magnesium as calcium, those with low blood
pressure may take twice as much calcium as magnesium, but both minerals in
relatively high amounts. Those with low blood pressure and a tendency towards
inflammations should also greatly reduce their intake of phosphorus. A high
level of phosphorus in the blood tends to cause magnesium and calcium levels to
be low.
Magnesium supplementation should be avoided with severe kidney
problems (severe renal insufficiency), and also with myasthenia gravis. Be
careful with severe adrenal weakness or with very low blood pressure. Too much
magnesium can cause muscle weakness, if this happens temporarily use more
calcium.
MAGNESIUM PROFILE
Magnesium is mainly found inside the
cells, it activates many enzymes and is necessary for the metabolism of
carbohydrates, fats and amino acids. It is essential for the functions of
muscles and nerves and for the formation of bones and teeth. Generally it
counteracts and regulates the influence of calcium.
Deficiency Symptoms
and Increased Requirements:
CIRCULATION: angina,
arteriosclerosis/atherosclerosis, blood pressure and cholesterol high, heart
infarcts, hypertension, strokes, tachycardia (fast pulse), thrombosis.
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM: colic, constipation, chronic diarrhoea, malabsorption,
pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas).
MUSCLES: backache,
convulsions, cramps, increased excitability/jumpiness, numbness, nystagmus
(rapid eye movements), spasms, tense/tight muscles, tingling, tremors.
NERVOUS SYSTEM: apathy, confusion, depression, disorientation, epilepsy,
hallucinations, irritability, mental illness, multiple sclerosis, nervousness,
neuritis paranoia, Parkinson's disease, poor memory, senility.
GENERAL:
alcoholism, arthritis, body odours, broken bones, calcification in any organ,
cancer, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, diabetes, eclampsia, headaches, infections and
inflammations, liver cirrhosis, lupus erythematosus, migraines, old age,
prostate problems, rickets, rigidity - mental and physical, skin wrinkled and
tough, stiffness, stone-formation in gall bladder or kidneys, thyroid
overactive.
Best Sources:
Fresh grass juice (e.g. wheat grass,
barley grass) and Barley Green powder, vegetable juices, kelp, seawater,
seafood, green leaves, molasses, soaked nuts and oily seeds, sprouted seeds.
Magnesium is the central mineral in chlorophyll, which has a similar protein
structure as haemoglobin.
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