The
Mineral That Could Have Saved 4 Million Women
by
Bill Sardi
Modern
medicine has made a remarkable admission. Its failure to utilize
a simple, inexpensive intravenous mineral drip might have saved
the lives millions of women over the past century. Modern medicine
knew about the cure since 1906. [New England Journal Medicine
333: 201-05, 1995]
Around
210 million women become pregnant annually around the world and
every minute a woman dies in pregnancy or childbirth, with a quarter
of these deaths due to a condition called pre-eclampsia which can
lead to the more severe and mortal condition called eclampsia. Women
may develop high blood pressure during pregnancy (pre-eclampsia)
and during or prior to birth may experience life-threatening seizures
(eclampsia). About 5-10 percent of women in their first pregnancy
develop pre-eclampsia.
Over
the past century, drugs rather than minerals have been employed
to treat eclampsia, Diazepam (Valium) in 1968 and then phenytoin
(Dilantin) in 1987. During the period 1905 to 1987 an estimated
42 million women may have undergone eclamptic convulsion and possibly
4 million died. The modern therapy for eclampsia now includes calcium-blocking
drugs and a host of anti-hypertensive agents. Drugs may reduce the
risk of severe high blood pressure, but not the overall rate of
hypertension nor the risk of eclampsia. [The Cochrane Library,
Issue 2, 2002] Yet the anticonvulsant drugs continue to be employed
with little reliable evidence that they work.
Finally,
a just-released study of 10,141 women in 33 countries has shown
beyond a "reasonable doubt" that intravenous magnesium reduces the
risks of eclampsia among women with pre-eclampsia. The relative
risk of eclampsia was reduced by 58 percent and the mortality rate
nearly cut in half among women receiving magnesium compared to those
who receive a saline drip. The authors of the study concluded that
"magnesium sulfate is remarkably effective at reducing the risk
of eclampsia." [The Lancet 359: 1877-90, June 1, 2002]
Not
The First Time
This
wasn't the first study to conclusively show magnesium sulfate is
a remedy for eclampsia. In a 1995, a study heralded as the most
important obstetric trial of the 20th century, magnesium sulfate
was found to be the most effective approach to controlling convulsions
during childbirth. [British Medical Journal 311: 702-03,
1995] By 1998 data from numerous studies had been analyzed and it
was known that magnesium was superior to any anticonvulsant drugs.
[Cochrane Review 2002] This evidence still didn't convince
most obstetrical doctors.
Seven
years after the report showing magnesium reduces the risk of mortality
from eclampsia, a report endorsed by the World Health Organization
(WHO), UNICEF and the WORLD BANK, magnesium sulfate is still not
available to millions of women worldwide. British medical researchers
are pleading with the World Bank and WHO to fund and disseminate
treatment kits. [The Lancet 359: June 1, 2002]
Clues
Were There
It
wasn't as if physicians had no clues as to the cause of eclampsia.
The worldwide mortality rates from eclampsia vary widely from country
to country. The mortality rate from eclampsia ranges from 0 to 13.9
percent. [European Society Cardiology 21st Annual Congress, Sept.
1, 1999] So there are obviously some modifiable factors involved
in the development of eclampsia among pregnant females. Pre-eclampsia
and eclampsia are the most important causes of death during pregnancy
in the United Kingdom, USA and Nordic countries, nations that consume
the most calcium-rich dairy products. Calcium and magnesium must
be maintained in a proper ratio to maintain proper muscle tone and
prevent convulsive muscle spasms. Furthermore, estrogen and progesterone
levels, which increase as a pregnancy advances, elevate the body's
demand for magnesium. [Journal American College of Nutrition
12: 442-58, 1993] Magnesium is a natural calcium blocker. [American
Journal Medicine 96: 63-76, 1994]
Magnesium
Shunned For Heart Disease Too
This
isn't the first time magnesium has been shunned in favor of prescription
drugs. In the 1990s a preliminary report showed that intravenous
magnesium reduced mortality rates following a heart attack. This
was apparently perceived as a threat to the sale of calcium-blocking
drugs used for the same purpose. Medical researchers, financially
backed by a pharmaceutical company that produces calcium-blocker
drugs, deliberately chose to use an excessive dose of intravenous
magnesium to prove it was of no value during the post-heart attack
period. [Townsend Letter for Doctors, October 1998] The sale
of calcium-blockers never faltered. There are more than 64 million
annual prescriptions for calcium blocking drugs (Procardia, Cardizem,
Norvasc, Verpamil, Adalat, Dilacor, Verelan, Calan), with sales
exceeding $2.5 billion. [American Druggist 1997]
Magnesium
May Prevent Sudden-Death Heart Attacks
Magnesium
is not limited to treating heart disease after a heart attack. A
shortage of dietary magnesium has been repeatedly shown to be associated
with an increased risk of sudden-death heart attack. Unequivocally,
a shortage of magnesium from the American diet, in particular the
absence or shortage of magnesium in drinking water, is directly
related to sudden-death heart attack. [Epidemiology 10: 31-36,
1999; Heart 82: 455-60, 1999; American Journal Epidemiology
143: 456-62, 1996] Out of 750,000 heart attacks in the USA annually,
an estimated 340,000 deaths occur within one hour of a heart attack.
[Journal Nutrition Health Aging 5: 173-78, 2001]
One
study showed the relative risk of sudden-death heart attack is more
than 1.5 times higher among adults who consume on average 105 milligrams
of magnesium a day compared to adults who consume 233 milligrams
a day. [Magnesium Trace Element Research 9: 143-51, 1990]
Recently
researchers reported on the effects of slowly withdrawing magnesium
from the diet of postmenopausal women. Women began to exhibit abnormal
heart rhythms as circulating magnesium levels declined. [American
Journal Clinical Nutrition 75: 550-54, 2002]
Of
the minerals removed during water softening, magnesium is the only
mineral found to be deficient in the heart muscle of sudden-death
heart attack victims. [Science 208: 198-200, 1980] In an animal
experiment, no rodents experienced a sudden-death heart attack when
magnesium levels were adequate, whereas 4 of 11 rodents with low
magnesium levels experienced a sudden lethal heart muscle spasm.
[Journal American Collage Cardiology 27: 1771-76, 1996]
For
comparison, there are about 50,000 tobacco-related deaths per year
in the USA and consequently massive smoking-cessation efforts are
undertaken. There are more than 200,000 to 300,000 avoidable sudden-death
heart attacks that could be prevented by the provision of an inexpensive
mineral, yet public health authorities do nothing to stop the problem.
This amounts to over 500 needless deaths per day in the USA.
The
current approach to cardiovascular disease is to reduce circulating
cholesterol levels which has been shown to reduce the incidence
of heart attacks but has not reduced mortality rates. Sudden fatal
heart failure may be related to magnesium deficiency rather than
high cholesterol levels. [Medical Hypotheses 43: 187-92,
1994]
Widespread
Dietary Deficiency
A
1994 Gallup poll found that 72 percent of Americans don't consume
sufficient amounts of magnesium. The widespread consumption of processed
foods has led to a progressive decline in dietary magnesium. While
nuts and green leafy vegetables are good sources of magnesium, the
shortage of magnesium in the American diet, about 200-300 milligrams
per day, is not likely to be made up through foods alone.
|
Progressive
decline of dietary magnesium consumption
|
|
Years
Magnesium intake
|
milligrams
per day
|
|
1900-08
|
475-500
|
|
1909-13
|
415-435
|
|
1925-29
|
385-398
|
|
1935-39
|
360-375
|
|
1947-49
|
358-370
|
|
1957-59
|
340-360
|
|
1965-76
|
300-340
|
|
1978-85
|
225-318
|
|
1990-2002
|
175-225
|
|
[Magnesium
Trace Elements 10: 162-28, 1997]
|
Supplementation
Advised
Only
universal magnesium supplementation is likely to make up for such
a widespread mineral deficiency. Foods cannot easily be fortified
with magnesium because it is a bulky mineral that would alter the
consistency and taste of flour and foods. Magnesium cannot be added
to tap water because it would erode piping. Either magnesium pills
or magnesium added to bottled water would make up for this mineral
deficiency. Currently, only 5 major brands of bottled water provide
a desirable measure of more than 75 milligrams of magnesium per
liter and only one brand has a ratio of magnesium that exceeds that
of calcium.
Blood
tests for magnesium are notoriously inaccurate. Only 1 percent of
the total body magnesium pool exists outside of living cells. So
blood serum levels are notoriously inaccurate. [Clin Chem Lab
Med 37: 1011-33, 1999] Only red-blood cell magnesium levels
accurately determine the risk for pre-eclampsia and/or magnesium
deficiency, but this test is not commonly performed in laboratories.
[American Journal Hypertension 13: 765-69, 2000]
A
bias against the use of intravenous magnesium sulfate by modern
medicine has taken a terrible toll on humankind. Magnesium sulfate,
also known as Epsom salt, is not absorbed orally and attracts water
in the colon and would thus act as a laxative. So Epsom salts are
not recommended orally. Magnesium pills are recommended (200-400
milligrams per day). Magnesium has been called the "The Forgotten
Mineral" and the "5-Cent Miracle Tablet" by medical researchers.
Numerous researchers have reported that the provision of this mineral
in the population at large would greatly diminish the incidence
of kidney stones (1 in 11 Americans), calcified mitral heart valve
(1 in 12 Americans), premenstrual tension, constipation, miscarriages,
stillbirths, strokes, diabetes, thyroid failure, asthma, chronic
eyelid twitch (blepharospasm), brittle bones, chronic migraines,
muscle spasms and anxiety reactions. [Pediatric Asthma, Allergy
Immunology 5: 273-79; Journal Bone Mineral Research 13:
749-58, 1998; Magnesium 5: 1-8, 1986; Medical Hypotheses
43: 187-92, 1994] That's a lot of health benefits for a nickel.
Sufficient provision of magnesium in the American population would
likely reduce health care costs by billions of dollars.
June
4, 2002
Bill
Sardi [send him mail] is president
of Knowledge of Health, Inc., San Dimas, California. His latest
book is In
Search of the World's Best Water,
Here & Now Books.
Copyright
© 2002 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not for commercial reproduction without permission of the author.
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