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I would like some sort of citation, considering that there are tons of mainstream sources cited on the wikipedia articles. Note that a symptom doesn't have to be medically serious for treatment to be desireable. To the other poster, the spasms are a symptom of magnesium deficiency, so if you stopped taking the supplements and showed immediate symptoms of being deficient, that would be why he wanted you to take them.
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# ? Oct 30, 2014 20:10 |
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 08:33 |
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no, the spasms had subsided by the time I saw the second doctor; in general he like his patients with any history of anxiety struggles to take mag. I do think it was very helpful during the period directly following discontinuation of benzodiazepines after long term use; I'm less convinced that it does anything for me at this point.
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# ? Oct 30, 2014 20:23 |
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Hodgepodge posted:I would like some sort of citation, considering that there are tons of mainstream sources cited on the wikipedia articles. Sure, here's one of the first non quack journals I could find: http://jic.sagepub.com/content/20/1/3.full.pdf+html quote:symptom doesn't have to be medically serious for treatment to be desireable Lets agree to disagree, otherwise i'd have to start treating morgellons aswell.
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# ? Oct 30, 2014 20:44 |
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IAMNOTADOCTOR posted:Lets agree to disagree, otherwise i'd have to start treating morgellons aswell.
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# ? Oct 30, 2014 22:04 |
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Tim Raines IRL posted:It doesn't help that modern farming techniques may be depleting magnesium among other things. Hodgepodge posted:Unless, like me, you take it for spasms and other muscle-related effects of depletion and over-activation of the NMDA receptions.
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# ? Oct 30, 2014 22:08 |
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Dancer posted:This is the other good rule of thumb, for both vitamins and minerals. When you take in a lot, your body will get used to excreting a lot to protect itself. By this same mechanism it's possible to get symptoms of insufficient vitamin intake even though you're taking in a normal amount, if your body is adapted to taking in a lot (there's a specific term for this, which I don't recall). That would make sense; suddenly your body is excreting more than it should for your new intake. Another speculative mechanism is that the NMDA receptors might take awhile to get used to having less magnesium, which functions to decrease calcium signalling (technically it is an antagonist, as are benzos which is a hint as why they would moderate withdrawl). Until it adjusts by downregulating the receptors that calcium binds to, you would have symptoms of excess calcium signalling. Either seems plausible to me, which honestly doesn't mean much. As a sidenote, a good 70% of calcium supplements are Magnesium Oxide, which is supposedly only as medicinal as your need for a laxative at a given moment.
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# ? Oct 30, 2014 22:37 |
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Right. The one I have taken the most is mag citrate, usually Calm brand. I'd also point out that being polydrugged at a young age with a ton of things that seemed to cause many more problems than the ones I had to being with, has a lot to do with the fairly woo stance I take on a lot of things at this point. Don't get me wrong, I trust doctors a lot more than I trust woo practitioners or supplement manufacturers, but that doesn't say much at all.
Cabbages and Kings fucked around with this message at 22:54 on Oct 30, 2014 |
# ? Oct 30, 2014 22:52 |
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 08:33 |
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Tim Raines IRL posted:Right. The one I have taken the most is mag citrate, usually Calm brand. I'd also point out that being polydrugged at a young age with a ton of things that seemed to cause many more problems than the ones I had to being with, has a lot to do with the fairly woo stance I take on a lot of things at this point. Don't get me wrong, I trust doctors a lot more than I trust woo practitioners or supplement manufacturers, but that doesn't say much at all. I think part of the problem is that (most) doctors aren't scientists. My boss is a biologist and isn't terribly fond of many doctors because there's this tendency for them to believe themselves to be experts in fields where such expertise isn't really possible. A good example is something like medicating depression. Because we can't drill into a person's skull and actually look at the present levels of dopamine/seratonin/etc, there literally isn't anything doctors can do (in addition to therapy of course) other than throw different medications/types of medications against the disease and see what sticks. Despite this, many doctors have convinced themselves that, for example, one particular SSRI is the best because of their own subjective experience, and unlike a scientist there's no peer review to reign them in. So while actual doctors are certainly far better than people who practice pseudo-science, they shouldn't - individually - really be treated as authorities in their particular fields. The general consensus of physicians/scientists is another matter entirely and is the closest thing to an authority that we have access to. It's just that individual doctors are often a problem, and this is particularly the case in fields like psychiatry where it is absolutely necessary that physicians take continued education seriously.
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# ? Oct 30, 2014 23:11 |