That headline is too absolute. Magnesium isn’t “never use”—but it can interact with certain medications, so timing and dose matter.
⚠️ Medications that can interact with magnesium
🦠 1. Certain antibiotics
- Tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones
- Magnesium can bind to the drug in the gut, making it much less effective
👉 Separate doses by at least 2–4 hours.
🫀 2. Diuretics (“water pills”)
- Some increase magnesium loss; others can raise levels
- Examples are used for conditions like hypertension
👉 Your levels may need monitoring.
❤️ 3. Heart medications
- Especially digoxin
- Magnesium imbalance can affect heart rhythm
👉 Needs medical guidance.
🦴 4. Osteoporosis medications
- Bisphosphonates
- Magnesium can reduce absorption if taken together
👉 Take them at different times.
🧠 5. Sedatives or CNS depressants
- Magnesium can have a mild relaxing effect
- May enhance drowsiness when combined
🩺 6. Thyroid medications
- Like levothyroxine
- Magnesium can interfere with absorption
👉 Separate by at least 4 hours.
🚫 When to be extra careful
- Kidney problems (risk of magnesium buildup)
- High doses from supplements (more likely to interact than food)
🟡 Important reality check
- Magnesium from food (nuts, seeds, greens) is generally safe
- Problems usually happen with supplements, especially high doses
🟢 Bottom line
You don’t need to “never use magnesium.”
👉 You just need to use it correctly and space it properly if you’re on certain medications.
If you want, tell me which medications you’re taking—I can check for specific interactions and give you exact timing.