Magnesium in human health and disease /

Magnesium is an essential mineral which is required for growth and survival of humans. Since magnesium is a mineral and not synthesizable it must be obtained through dietary foods and/or supplements. Magnesium in Human Health and Disease reviews the benefits of magnesium supplementation to reach rec...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors: SpringerLink (Online service)
Group Author: Watson, Ronald R. (Ronald Ross); Preedy, Victor R.; Zibadi, Sherma.
Published: Humana Press,
Publisher Address: New York :
Publication Dates: 2013.
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
Series: Nutrition and health
Subjects:
Online Access: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-62703-044-1
Summary: Magnesium is an essential mineral which is required for growth and survival of humans. Since magnesium is a mineral and not synthesizable it must be obtained through dietary foods and/or supplements. Magnesium in Human Health and Disease reviews the benefits of magnesium supplementation to reach recommended intakes as well as provides new research that suggests how reaching levels above the recommended intakes can promote health and treat various diseases. Magnesium deficiency can cause low serum potassium and calcium levels, retention of sodium, and low circulating levels of regulatory hormones. These changes in nutrients cause neurological and muscular symptoms such as tremor and muscle spasms. Further magnesium deficiency causes loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, personality changes and death from heart failure. Causes of magnesium deficiency include alcohol abuse, poorly controlled diabetes, excessive or chronic vomiting and/or diarrhea. Thus the effects of inadequate and deficient intakes or levels of magnesium is critical to health and are reviewed by the expert clinicians in this book. Magnesium in Human Health and Disease provides the most current research to support the potential benefits or lack thereof for normal and high supplementation with magnesium. Animal model research and early human trials are reviewed to document other disease states such as hypertension, cholesterol level, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease that would benefit from increased magnesium.
Carrier Form: 1 online resource
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN: 9781627030441 (electronic bk.)
1627030441 (electronic bk.)
Index Number: QP535
CLC: R591.1
Contents: Introduction and mechanism of action --
Clinical Assessment of Magnesium Status in the Adult: An Overview /
Dietary Mg Intake and Biomarkers of Inflammation and Endothelial Dysfunction /
Magnesium Role in Cytokine Regulation of Hypoxic Placentas Related to Certain Placental Pathology /
Magnesium Status in Disease --
Magnesium Links to Asthma Control /
Magnesium and Kidney Disease /
Magnesium Intake, Genetic Variants, and Diabetes Risk /
Magnesium Deficiency in Type 2 Diabetes /
Magnesium Supplementation and Disease --
Magnesium and Metabolic Disorders /
Magnesium and Diabetes Prevention /
Magnesium Supplementation and Bone /
Magnesium Salts in a Cancer Patient: Pathobiology and Protective Functions /
Cardiovascular Disease and Magnesium --
Magnesium and Hypertension /
The Role of Magnesium in the Cardiovascular System /
Vascular Biology of Magnesium: Implications in Cardiovascular Disease /
Intravenous Magnesium for Cardiac Arrhythmias in Humans: A Role? /
Magnesium and Neurological Function --
Magnesium in Inflammation-Associated Fetal Brain Injury /
Magnesium and Its Interdependency with Other Cations in Acute and Chronic Stressor States /
Magnesium and Traumatic Brain Injury /
Magnesium in Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: From Bench to Bedside /
Magnesium and Alcohol /