That kind of statement is too absolute and misleading. Magnesium is an essential mineral and is often safe—but it can interact with certain medications, which is why spacing or dose adjustment may be needed, not “never use it.”
⚠️ When magnesium can interfere with medicines
💊 1. Antibiotics
Magnesium can reduce absorption of:
- Tetracyclines (e.g., doxycycline)
- Fluoroquinolones (e.g., ciprofloxacin)
👉 Fix: take magnesium 2–6 hours apart
🦴 2. Osteoporosis medications
- Bisphosphonates (e.g., alendronate)
👉 Magnesium can block absorption
👉 Take at different times
💓 3. Blood pressure / heart medications
- Some calcium channel blockers
- Can slightly enhance BP-lowering effect
👉 Usually not dangerous, but monitor blood pressure
🧠 4. Muscle relaxants or sedatives
- Magnesium may increase drowsiness in some cases
🩺 5. Kidney disease patients (important)
- If kidneys are weak, magnesium can build up in the body
👉 This is where doctors may restrict it
🧠 Important truth
- Magnesium is not generally dangerous
- It is actually helpful for:
- muscle cramps
- sleep
- nerve function
- heart rhythm
The real issue is timing, dose, and medical conditions—not “never use it.”
🚨 Bottom line
Magnesium is safe for most people, but it should be spaced from certain medications and avoided in severe kidney disease unless a doctor approves it.
If you want, tell me the medications you saw in that post—I can check which ones truly interact and which ones are just fear-based claims.