Dr. Sinatra's HeartMD Institute

Magnesium-Rich Foods

foods with magnesium

Mg.

If you know your periodic table, you recognize that as the chemical symbol for magnesium.

Magnesium is truly an amazing mineral. It’s involved in more than 300 enzymatic reactions in the body, including the creation and use of energy in cellular mitochondria. Heart rhythm, blood pressure, and arterial and muscle function also depend on magnesium.

It’s no wonder why the mineral is one of my Awesome Foursome nutrients for cardiovascular health!

Most Americans Are Magnesium Deficient

Unfortunately, it’s becoming hard and harder to consume adequate amounts of magnesium. Current RDAs are 420 mg for men and 320 mg for women, but it’s estimated that at least than half of the United States population gets less than that.

Processed foods are one reason we’re falling short, but blame also can be laid at the feet of industrialized farming. Thanks to inorganic fertilizers that deplete magnesium levels in the soil, many magnesium-rich foods simply don’t contain as much of the mineral as they used to.

Add the fact that stress, environmental toxins, and many prescription drugs deplete the body of magnesium, and it’s easy to see why deficiency is a common problem.

Low on Magnesium? Here are 5 Signs

High-Magnesium Foods List

To get your magnesium levels to an optimal place, I suggest doubling down on magnesium-rich foods; you can also take a magnesium supplement. Here are some of my favorite foods with magnesium:

You may notice that many of the choices on this list are also known for their fiber content. Drinking extra water will help your body manage the additional fiber that comes along with these magnesium-rich foods.

Lemon and Rosemary Power Greens

Magnesium Foods for Energy

I mentioned earlier that magnesium plays a key role in the production and use of cellular energy. This process is called the Krebs cycle, and simply put, it’s the complex series of biochemical reactions that the body goes through to convert food into ATP.

ATP, or adenosine triphosphate, is the energy molecule that gives our cells energy and life. The more of it you can create, the healthier and stronger you will be.

The Krebs cycle is relevant here because many of its reactions can’t happen without magnesium as a facilitator. So it’s not surprising that two symptoms of magnesium deficiency are fatigue and weakness—or that the heart, which is just a large muscle, often begins to beat erratically when magnesium levels are critically low.

Eating more magnesium foods helps ensure that your body always has enough of the mineral to maximize its ATP output—and by extension, your cardiac output and overall energy level.

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© Stephen Sinatra, MD. All rights reserved.

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