magnesium

19 interactions related to magnesium

levothyroxine + magnesium

Taking magnesium too close to levothyroxine can modestly reduce how much of the thyroid medicine is absorbed, because magnesium can bind levothyroxine in the gut.

moderate
levothyroxinemagnesiumabsorptionabsorption interactiondrug supplement interactionsupplement timingmedication timingTSHthyroid medicationantacids

vitamin d + magnesium

Magnesium helps activate and support the function of vitamin D; low magnesium can reduce the effectiveness of vitamin D supplementation. This is a beneficial nutrient synergy rather than a harmful interaction.

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vitamin dmagnesiumnutrient synergyabsorptionbone healthcalcium metabolismsupplement timingvitamin d absorptionZMA supplements

boron + magnesium

Boron appears to help the body retain magnesium by reducing how much is lost in the urine, and both minerals support the activation of vitamin D and healthy bone metabolism. The combined human evidence is modest and partly context-dependent, but the pairing is low-risk and biologically plausible, with the strongest rationale for postmenopausal bone health.

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boronmagnesiumbone healthmineral retentionvitamin dtrace mineralsmusculoskeletalsynergy

doxycycline + magnesium

Magnesium ions can bind doxycycline in the gastrointestinal tract, forming a poorly absorbed complex that reduces how much antibiotic reaches the bloodstream. Magnesium-containing supplements, antacids, and laxatives can meaningfully lower doxycycline absorption if taken at the same time.

moderate
doxycyclinemagnesiumantibioticchelationabsorptiontetracyclineantacidsupplement timing

hydrochlorothiazide + magnesium

Thiazide diuretics such as hydrochlorothiazide increase urinary magnesium excretion, and a meaningful minority of long-term users become magnesium-depleted. Low magnesium also makes potassium hard to replace and can worsen muscle cramps and heart-rhythm risk.

moderate
hydrochlorothiazidemagnesiumhypomagnesemiathiazidediureticelectrolyteshypertensionpotassium

omeprazole + magnesium

Long-term omeprazole use (typically more than a year, occasionally sooner) can lower body magnesium, likely by impairing active intestinal magnesium transport through the TRPM6/TRPM7 channels. The FDA issued a formal Drug Safety Communication in 2011 warning that prescription proton pump inhibitors can cause hypomagnesemia, with serious cases involving abnormal heart rhythm, muscle spasm (tetany), and seizures.

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omeprazoleppimagnesiumhypomagnesemiafda warningabsorptionlong-termarrhythmia

pantoprazole + magnesium

Pantoprazole, like all proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), is associated with low magnesium (hypomagnesemia) after long-term use, likely by impairing active intestinal magnesium transport. The FDA included pantoprazole in its 2011 Drug Safety Communication on PPI-induced hypomagnesemia, which in severe cases can cause arrhythmia, tetany, and seizures.

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pantoprazoleprotonixppimagnesiumhypomagnesemiafda warningabsorptionarrhythmia

oral contraceptives + magnesium

Observational studies dating back to the 1970s have found that women taking combined oral contraceptives tend to have somewhat lower serum magnesium levels than non-users, likely through estrogen-related shifts in how the body distributes and excretes magnesium. This is a nutritional observation, not a contraceptive-failure risk. Magnesium does not reduce the pill's effectiveness, and links between low magnesium and pill side effects or clotting risk remain theoretical rather than proven.

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oral contraceptivesbirth controlmagnesiumnutrient depletionpmsfatiguethromboembolismsupplementation

calcium + magnesium

Calcium and magnesium work together in bone mineralization, muscle contraction, and nerve signaling. They share some intestinal absorption pathways, so very large single doses of one can modestly reduce uptake of the other. A balanced intake of both, weighted toward food, supports bone health better than emphasizing calcium alone.

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calciummagnesiumbone healthosteoporosismineral ratiomuscle functionsleepsynergy

potassium + magnesium

Magnesium is required for the Na/K-ATPase pump that maintains intracellular potassium, so magnesium deficiency can cause potassium loss that does not correct with potassium alone until magnesium is also replaced. Both minerals independently support healthy blood pressure and cardiac rhythm, though the size of any added benefit from taking them together has not been well studied.

moderate
potassiummagnesiumblood pressurehypertensioncardiac rhythmelectrolytesna-k-atpasesynergy

ashwagandha + magnesium

Ashwagandha helps dampen the body's stress-hormone response while magnesium supports the relaxation and nervous-system pathways that let the body wind down. The two act on different parts of the stress-and-sleep system, but no human trial has tested the specific combination, so any added benefit is inferred from each ingredient on its own rather than demonstrated together.

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ashwagandhamagnesiumsleepanxietystresscortisoladaptogensynergygaba

vitamin b1 + magnesium

Magnesium is the cofactor that converts thiamine (vitamin B1) into its active coenzyme form, thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP). When magnesium is low, thiamine cannot activate fully, so a thiamine supplement may produce little benefit until magnesium status is restored. The two work together rather than against each other.

moderate
thiaminevitamin b1magnesiumtppenergy metabolismcofactorwernickesynergy

melatonin + magnesium

Melatonin provides a circadian timing signal while magnesium supports a calmer nervous system, so the two target different parts of the sleep problem and are commonly combined. The pairing is generally well tolerated short term, though rigorous proof of a specific two-ingredient synergy is limited.

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melatoninmagnesiumsleepinsomniacircadiansynergynighttimeelderly

furosemide + magnesium

Furosemide blocks the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter in the loop of Henle, which removes the electrical gradient that normally helps the kidney reabsorb magnesium. This can increase urinary magnesium loss, especially with high-dose or prolonged use. In most outpatients the kidney's downstream segments compensate, so clinically meaningful hypomagnesemia is less common with loop diuretics than with thiazides; the effect is more relevant during high-dose IV diuresis, critical illness, or poor intake.

moderate
furosemidemagnesiumhypomagnesemialoop diureticlasixelectrolytesheart failurearrhythmia

l-theanine + magnesium

L-theanine and magnesium are both gentle, non-sedating relaxants that act on the same nervous-system pathways from different angles: L-theanine raises alpha-wave activity and modestly increases GABA, serotonin and dopamine, while magnesium dampens NMDA-receptor excitation and supports GABA-A signalling. A single preclinical study (Dasdelen et al., Frontiers in Nutrition, 2022) found a magnesium-L-theanine complex outperformed L-theanine alone in rats, but no human trial has tested the combination, so the pairing is reasonable rather than proven synergistic in people.

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l-theaninemagnesiumgabasleeprelaxationalpha-wavesstresssynergy

magnesium + glycine

Magnesium and glycine are commonly combined as magnesium bisglycinate, a chelate whose clearest benefit is being gentle on the gut and improving adherence, rather than dramatically higher absorption.

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magnesiumglycinebisglycinateabsorptionsleepbioavailabilitychelatesynergy

vitamin b6 + magnesium

Vitamin B6 and magnesium are nutritional partners: magnesium is needed to activate B6 into its coenzyme form, and B6 appears to support magnesium's uptake into cells. Randomized trials suggest the pair can ease premenstrual and stress-related symptoms somewhat better than magnesium alone, especially in people running low on magnesium. The effect is modest and beneficial, not a safety concern.

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vitamin b6magnesiumpmspremenstrual syndromeanxietystresssynergyp5p

magnesium + zinc

At high supplemental doses, zinc and magnesium can each modestly reduce the other's absorption in the gut — and the better-documented direction is zinc lowering magnesium absorption, not the reverse. The effect is minor and dose-dependent; ordinary multivitamin amounts rarely matter.

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magnesiumzincabsorptionabsorption interactionsupplement timingmineral absorptionzinc absorptionzinc supplementZMA supplements

alcohol + magnesium

Alcohol acts as an acute magnesium diuretic, increasing urinary magnesium excretion within hours of intake. Regular and heavy drinking can deplete body magnesium stores through renal wasting combined with reduced intestinal absorption and poor diet, and low magnesium is common in chronic alcohol-use disorder.

moderate
alcoholmagnesiumhypomagnesemiadiureticwithdrawaldeficiencyelectrolytearrhythmia