That statement is too absolute—and a bit misleading.
In most cases, you don’t need to “never” use Magnesium with these medications. The real issue is usually timing and monitoring, not complete avoidance.
Here’s the accurate version:
⚠️ Medications that require caution (not total avoidance)
Antibiotics
- Ciprofloxacin
- Doxycycline
👉 Magnesium can bind to these and reduce absorption
✅ Fix: Take magnesium 2–4 hours apart
Thyroid medication
- Levothyroxine
👉 Can interfere with absorption
✅ Fix: Take magnesium several hours later (often 4 hours)
Osteoporosis medications
- Alendronate
👉 Absorption is very sensitive
✅ Fix: Take this medication on an empty stomach, magnesium later in the day
Diuretics (water pills)
👉 May raise or lower magnesium levels unpredictably
✅ Fix: Monitor levels with a doctor
Certain heart medications
👉 Magnesium can affect heart rhythm and drug effects
✅ Fix: Use only under medical guidance
🚫 When “avoid completely” might apply
There are a few situations where magnesium should be limited or avoided unless a doctor approves:
- Kidney disease (risk of magnesium buildup)
- Already high magnesium levels
- Specific high-risk drug combinations prescribed by a doctor
✔️ The real takeaway
Instead of “never use,” the correct rule is:
👉 “Use magnesium carefully, and space it properly from certain medications.”
If you want, tell me the exact meds you’re thinking about—I can give you precise timing instructions tailored to your routine.