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Water Report: by Bill Sardi

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Water Report: by Bill Sardi JoAnn Guest Sep 17, 2005 13:34 PDT

 

Why do well conditioned adults drop dead during or shortly after

exercise?

 

Work out, run, sweat, then rehydrate after a long physical workout with

plain bottled water and you may end up grabbing your chest as your heart

flutters out of control. Bottled water can't be held responsible for

something it doesn't supply, an essential mineral that could eliminate

or minimize the risk for sudden death heart attack.

 

It's ironic that while lack of physical exercise may be a leading risk

factor for coronary heart disease, on occasion well-trained athletes die

suddenly during or immediately after exercise.

 

Common symptoms of magnesium deficiency

Fatigue

Irritability

Insomnia

Muscle spasms

Irregular heart beat

Migraines

Permenstrual cramping and tension

Constipation

Uncontrollable eyelid twitch

Just this past December the Baltimore Sun published a report about " six

vigorous, middle-aged professionals, four of them doctors, who exercised

for all the right reasons, to relieve stress, reduce blood pressure, and

condition their hearts and lungs, " but died suddenly during or shortly

after workouts. Three law enforcement officers in a Tustin California

Police Department running club have also died suddenly, without

explanation. People still talk about Jim Fixx, the author of a

best-selling book on the health benefits of running, who ironically died

of a.heart attack at the age of 52 years while running.

 

Some of these deaths are blamed on low sodium levels, dehydration,

others on blood vessel and coronary artery disease. But a major

unreported cause is a likely magnesium deficiency. A recent report

confirms that magnesium is often depleted by physical exercise.

[Critical Review food Science Nutrition 42: 533-63, 2002] Irregular

heart beat is related to a shortage of magnesium. [Journal Internal

Medicine 247: 78-86, 2000]

 

Sports drinks supply energy and replace salts, but not magnesium

 

 

Sports drinks commonly provide sugar and potassium but not magnesium

Sports drinks often supply sugar as energy for endurance athletes, and

replacement sodium and potassium to prevent dehydration, but very little

if any magnesium. Bottled water is usually low in minerals if an

American brand, and much higher in minerals if bottled in Europe. Right

after a workout many athletes will reach for an available bottled water

which is typically low in minerals (sometimes called dissolved solids),

in particular low in magnesium. The electrolyte minerals in the blood

circulation are further diluted, and bang, the heart muscles start to

spasm. What the heart needs is magnesium, and it needs it immediately

after physical exercise. Magnesium in drinking water is not only more

easily absorbed than from foods, but it immediately enters the blood

circulation.

 

 

Water: tap, filtered or bottled? A new bottled mineral water may save

your life

 

As bottlers of drinking water conduct price wars, or introduce faddish

brands with added ginseng or other herbs and vitamins which soon will

disappear and be remembered as only a passing fad, a new class of

bottled water is emerging that could save thousands of lives, quell

chronic migraine headaches, relieve bouts of anxiety, relax tense

muscles, lower cholesterol, dissolve kidney stones, prevent calcified

heart valves, and even take care of a stubborn case of constipation.

Aware that 8 in 10 Americans are deficient in a common mineral, American

water bottlers are beginning to respond with new brands of mineral-rich

bottled water.

 

 

Deep breathing provides more oxygen without the cost of oxygenated water

 

Forget about those ads for oxygenated water, touted as vitamin O, which

you see from time to time. Deep breathing will get you all the extra

oxygen you need.Forget about those bottled waters which claim they

hydrate the body better by altering H2O molecules. Dismiss those claims

that bottled water is just high-priced tap water. Chlorinated tap water

is a carcinogen, linked to 20,000 new cases of bladder, rectal and

kidney cancer annually. Even filtered tap water, chlorine removed, won't

make up for a mineral shortage that is suddenly killing Americans before

paramedics even have a chance to place their defibrillator paddles on

your chest.

 

To make matters worse, tap water is softened with sodium before it

enters the piping system in most American homes, increasing the risk for

high blood pressure and softening of bones. The most advanced water

filter won't alter the mineral content of your drinking water. Tap water

is softened so your washing machine and dishwasher will make suds, it is

not designed for human health. More troublesome is the fact that

mineral-free distilled water will only worsen the major mineral

deficiency that leads to sudden cardiac failure.

 

The link between sudden cardiac death and mineral-depleted drinking

water

 

Progressive decline of dietary magnesium consumption

Years Magnesium intake

per day

1900-1908 475-500 mg

1909-1913 415-435 mg

1925-1929 385-398 mg

1935-1939 360-375 mg

1947-1949 358-370 mg

1957-1959 340-360 mg

1965-1976 300-340 mg

1978-1985 225-318 mg

1990 175-225 mg

2002 231-376 mg

Magnesium Trace Elements 10: 182-92, 1991; Vital & Health Statistics,

No. 245, 2002

 

Sudden-death heart attack is common. Out of the 750,000 heart attacks

that occur annually in the USA, about 340,000 are of the sudden-death

type. While there are other reasons for sudden heart stoppage, it is

estimated that 200,000 of these sudden-death heart attacks emanate from

a spasm of the heart muscle and have nothing to do with cholesterol or

blood clots.

 

The first sign of heart muscle irritability is usually atrial

fibrillation, the top chambers of the heart flutter. Many Americans are

treated for atrial fibrillation with blood thinners. Due to the

stimulating effects of caffeine, people who drink too much coffee may

experience heart flutters from time to time. The same is true for folks

who are fanatic about losing weight, take too much of the stimulant herb

ephedra and suffer a sudden heart attack. But the chief cause of sudden

cardiac death is a lack of magnesium.

 

The big event is when the lower ventricles begin to quiver, ventrilcular

fib is what the paramedics call it when they have their electrodes

hooked up to your chest and can visualize your heart rhythm on a

monitor. This means the heart has to be immediately shocked back into

normal rhythm. Sadly, most of the time the paramedics are too late.

Defibrillation, the application of an electrical impulse to shock the

heart back into a regular rhythm, is successful only about 5% of the

time. [American Red Cross]

 

A 1991 study conducted with rats found the following:

Magnesium deficient rats 4 of 11 had sudden death heart attack

Magnesium adequate rats

0 of 8 had a heart attack

[J Am College Cardiology 27: 1771-76, 1996]

In the archives at the National Library of Medicine the most often cited

relationship in regards to sudden cardiac death is a shortage of

magnesium, in particular the lack of magnesium in drinking water apart

from magnesium in foods or supplements.

 

Studies conducted around the world confirm where magnesium levels are

relatively high in drinking water the rate of sudden death heart attack

is low. The 25 US cities with the lowest death rates from coronary

artery disease have richer sources of magnesium in their drinking water.

[J Am Med Assn. 195: 81-125, 1966]

 

Furthermore, the morning hours are when magnesium levels are 50-70

percent lower and correspond to the hours when most heart attacks occur.

[Magnesium and Public Health: the impact of drinking water, Dept. of

Animal Physiology and Nutrition Agricultural University, The

Netherlands; Am Heart Journal 140: 438-42, 2000]

 

Just recently researchers slowly withdrew magnesium from the diets of

women and observed the onset of abnormal heart rhythms. Researchers at

the US Department of Agriculture in Grand Forks, North Dakota, have

advised that people who live in soft water areas, or where the municipal

water is softened at home or by water suppliers, or people who take

diuretic drugs that promote the loss of water from the body, are

predisposed to magnesium loss. [Am J Clinical Nutrition 75: 550-54,

2002]

 

BRAND Magnesium

Calcium Sodium Potassium

milligrams per liter

Aquafina 22.0 35.0 11.0 4.0

Arrowhead 3.5 20.5 12.0 1.4

Calcium Spgs 35.1 135.0 25.2 1.9

Crystal Geyser 6.0 27.4 13.0 0

Evian 24.0 78.0 5.0 1.0

Fiji 13.0 17.0 18.0 4.0

Gerolsteiner 108.0 347.0 119.0 11.0

*Noah's 110.0 3.8 6.4 0

Perrier 3.7 152.0 9.6 0.6

*Palomar Mt

(per 700 milliliter) 58.0 24.0 16.0 0

Sparkletts 0 0 3.8 0

San Pellegrino 58.0 207.0 45.0 0

*Only bottled waters with positive magnesium over calcium ratio

Of the minerals removed during water softening, magnesium is the only

mineral found to be deficient in the heart muscle of sudden-death heart

attack victims. [science 208: 198-200, 1980]

 

Bottled water produced in the USA is essentially soft (low mineral)

water, the exact type of water health authorities at the US Department

of Agriculture link with the development of magnesium shortages that can

induce an abnormal heart rhythm!

 

Calcium/magnesium ratio

 

Americans hear a lot about the health benefits of calcium and little

about magnesium. While calcium is the primary mineral in bones, it is

also a muscle constrictor. Magnesium is its counterpart and serves as a

muscle relaxant. A balance between calcium and magnesium helps to

maintain muscle tone. Excessive calcium may produce symptoms of muscle

spasm such as recurrent migraines, chronic eyelid twitch, heart

flutters, back aches, leg cramps, constipation, and monthly cramping in

females. The body is just too tense when calcium is dominant.

 

In Scandinavian countries where the ratio of calcium over magnesium in

the diet ranges from 4-to-1 to 7-to1, mortality rates are the highest in

the world. Americans consume about 600-1200 milligrams of calcium from

dietary sources but only 200-275 milligrams of magnesium, a ratio of

about 3-to1.

 

The antidote is magnesium, a natural calcium blocker and muscle

relaxant. Billions of dollars of calcium-blocking drugs are sold

annually in the USA. About 8 in 10 Americans don't consume enough

magnesium, a mineral found in small amounts in green leafy vegetables,

nuts and other foods. A survey conducted a few years back by the Gallup

Organization found that 72% of Americans were deficient in magnesium. It

is unlikely that food alone can make up for shortages of magnesium in

the American diet. The dietary shortage of magnesium in the daily

American diet is in the range of 100-200 milligrams per day.

 

 

The link between water hardness (more minerals) and the reduced

incidence of fatalities from heart disease was first reported in 1957

and has since been reported in many regions of the world. [Canadian

Review Biology 37: 115-25, 1978]

USA The 25 US cities with the lowest death rates from coronary artery

disease have richer sources of magnesium in their drinking water. [J Am

Med Assn. 195: 81-125, 1966]

Canada Canadian researchers identified magnesium as the most likely

mineral in drinking water involved in the reduced risk of heart attack.

[Lancet 1: 121-22, 1976]

South Africa Districts in South Africa with high magnesium levels in

drinking water have lower death rates from heart disease. [south African

Medical Journal 64: 775-76, 1983]

Spain In Spain, water hardness was measured and areas with the lowest

magnesium concentration had a 360% increased risk for high blood

pressure. [Review Scandinavian Public Hygiene 64: 377-85, 1990]

Sweden Swedish health authorities report magnesium in drinking water

reduces rates of heart disease, particularly among men. [scandinavian

Journal Work Environmental Health 17: 91-94, 1991]

Italy Area around Tuscany, Italy found to have twice the incidence of

sudden death as the European average. The area has drinking water that

is low in magnesium. [Angiology 46: 145-49, 1995]

Sweden In Sweden, men aged 50-69 years who consumed the greatest amount

of magnesium from drinking water had a 35% less risk for a heart attack.

Calcium did not reduce the risk. [American Journal Epidemiology 143:

456-62, 1996]

France French recommend adding magnesium to drinking water after link is

established between low magnesium levels and sudden-death. [Annals

Medicine Interne 148: 440-44, 1992]

Taiwan Taiwanese health officials confirm lower risk of heart disease

among adults who consume drinking water with higher levels of magnesium.

[J Toxicology Environmental Health 60: 231-41, 2000]

USA

California health officials indicate thousands of lives could be saved

with the provision of magnesium in drinking water. [Epidemiological

Reviews 19: 258-72, 1997]

 

 

Magnesium: diet, supplements or drinking water?

 

But why magnesium in drinking water rather than foods, and why won't a

magnesium tablet make up for shortages of this mineral? This is

explained by the rapidity of magnesium losses, how magnesium is absorbed

in drinking water as well as the timing of its delivery into the blood

circulation.

 

First, while the normal size adult human body contains about 25,000

milligrams of magnesium, most of it stored in tissues, organs and bones,

and only about 1% of magnesium is found in the blood circulation. The

blood circulation is what bathes the heart in electrolyte minerals

(sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium) which are required for the

heart's electrical pacing activity. [Magnesium Information Center, New

York] So a significant drop in magnesium levels may occur much more

rapidly due to sweating, dehydration, dilution or urinary elimination

from the blood circulation than from organs, bone and tissues.

 

Second, magnesium in drinking water is about 30 percent more

bioavailable than magnesium in pills. [Acta Pharmcology Toxicology 41:

154, 1977] Magnesium in bottled water can't approach the milligram

dosage provided by mineral supplements, but minerals in drinking water

are more rapidly absorbed and make an immediate contribution to the

critical electrolyte balance required for proper heart rhythm.

 

Third, just a small amount of magnesium in drinking water appears to

have an almost magical effect in reducing the risk of sudden death.

[Epidemiological Reviews 19: 258-72, 1997] While magnesium in drinking

water is calculated to contribute only 10% of the daily intake of

magnesium, this small amount may have a significant impact upon public

health. A 10% increase in magnesium consumption from drinking water

(about 30-40 milligrams) could bring about a 30% reduction in the risk

of death from heart disease. [American Journal Epidemiology 143: 456-62,

1996; Epidemiology 10: Editorials, Jan. 1999]

 

Factors that increase the need for magnesium:

Physical or emotional stress

Alcohol

Birth control pills

Estrogen replacement

Soft water

Saturated fat

Calcium

Vitamin D

Sugar

Drugs: Digitalis (Digoxin), steroids, water pills (diuretics)

Monthly hormonal peak in females

 

Municipal water suppliers aren't able to fortify drinking water with

magnesium because it would erode piping systems. [Magnesium 4: 5-15,

1985] Sufficient amounts of magnesium can't be added to foods as

magnesium is very bulky and would alter taste if it were fortified in

foods. [Magnesium Research 2: 195-203, 1989] Magnesium pills are helpful

but don't deliver magnesium when it's critically needed, when the body

is being rehydrated after sweating.

 

While some brands of bottled water provide a significant amount of

magnesium (Calcium Springs 138 mg, Gerolsteiner 108 mg, Colfax 91 mg;

Evian 23 mg; Crystal Geyser 27.4; Saratoga 28 mg; Fiji 13 mg), in all

these brands calcium exceeds the amount of magnesium and negates much of

the muscle relaxing effect.

 

There is an effort to place cardiac defibrillators throughout the USA in

order to reduce response time when sudden heart spasm occurs. It would

be much more practical to provide magnesium-rich drinking water. Health

authorities should mandate fortification of bottled water with magnesium

as they do fortification of flour with other essential vitamins and

minerals. But there is no demand to do so.

 

Does magnesium in drinking water partly explain worldwide differences in

heart disease?

 

The rate of heart disease in Europe is much lower than in the USA. At a

mildly elevated systolic blood pressure of 140 mmHg, 1 out of every 7

men from northern Europe and the United States die from CHD, while in

Mediterranean southern Europe only 1 out of every 28 men die from this

disease. [New England Journal Medicine, Jan. 6, 2000] This difference is

attributed to the Mediterranean diet of fish, flavonoid antioxidants

from wine and other dietary factors. Yet nothing is said of the fact

that Europeans almost exclusively drink bottled water and it is far

richer in magnesium than American bottled waters.

 

Average amt. magnesium per liter

US Bottled waters European bottled waters

2.7 mg 20.0 mg

For comparison---

Tobacco-related deaths per year USA 50,000 estimated

Magnesium-shortage related deaths per year USA More than 200,000

estimated

 

Magnesium blood tests inaccurate

 

Unfortunately, magnesium deficiency often goes undetected even by blood

test. The most widely used test, serum magnesium, only measures 0.3% of

the magnesium in the body. [The Magnesium Information Center, New York]

Most physicians are unaware of this and utilize a test that is unlikely

to reveal a magnesium deficiency with reliability. Even with repeated

blood testing, magnesium levels may drop rapidly with losses from sweat

or use of diuretics in between blood testing.

 

Some cities in the USA with the highest calcium to magnesium ratio in

drinking water which are considered to have the highest risk for sudden

cardiac death:

City, State Calcium Magnesium

Clovis, California 3230 mg 21 mg

Lansing, Michigan 193 mg 58 mg

Santa Barbara, California 77-144 mg 23-62 mg

Carlsbad, New Mexico 88 mg 17 mg

Los Angeles, California 56-72 mg 22-26 mg

 

To learn more about health and drinking water, obtain a copy of the

book: In Search Of The World's Best Water, by Bill Sardi,

www.hereandnowbooks.com.

 

All right reserved. Please do not copy or use for commercial purposes.

Copyright Bill Sardi, Knowledge of Health, Inc., 2003.

 

Table of Food Sources of Magnesium

Food Milligrams

100 percent Bran, 2 Tbs 44

Kiwi fruit, raw, 1 med 23

Wheat germ, toasted, 1 oz 90

Almonds, dry roasted, 1 oz 86

Cereal, shredded wheat, 2 rectangular biscuits 80

Seeds, pumpkin, 1/2 oz 75

Cashews, dry roasted, 1 oz 73

Nuts, mixed, dry roasted, 1 oz 66

Spinach, cooked, 1/2 c 65

Bran flakes, 1/2 c 60

Cereal, oats, instant/fortified, cooked w/ water, 1 c 56

Potato, baked w/ skin, 1 med 55

Spinach, raw, 1 c 24

Peanuts, dry roasted, 1 oz 50

Peanut butter, 2 Tbs. 50

Chocolate bar, 1.45 oz 45

Vegetarian baked beans, 1/2 c 40

Potato, baked w/out skin, 1 med 40

Avocado, California, 1/2 med 35

Lentils, cooked, 1/2 c 35

Banana, raw, 1 medium 34

Shrimp, mixed species, raw, 3 oz (12 large) 29

Bread, whole wheat, 1 slice 24

Raisins, golden seedless, 1/2 c packed 28

Cocoa powder, unsweetened, 1 Tbs 27

 

*DV = Daily Value. DVs are reference numbers based on the Recommended

Dietary Allowance (RDA). They were developed to help consumers determine

if a food contains very much of a specific nutrient. The DV for

magnesium is 400 milligrams (mg). The percent DV (%DV) listed on the

nutrition facts panel of food labels tells adults what percentage of the

DV is provided by one serving. Even foods that provide lower percentages

of the DV will contribute to a healthful diet.

 

Source: Clinical Nutrition Service, Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical

Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, in

conjunction with the Office of Dietary Supplements in the Office of the of NIH.

 

 

http://www.knowledgeofhealth.com/report.asp?story=Why%20do%20well%20conditioned%\

20adults%20drop%20dead%20during%20or%20shortly%20after%20exercise

 

 

Confused About Finding the Best Drinking Water?

 

 

 

Now Available from the Natural Health Librarian

 

 

 

 

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Copyright 2005 Bill Sardi. All material on this site, including all

factual statements and opinions, are solely those of Bill Sardi and are

not sponsored, endorsed, or authorized by any other person or entity. If

you have a health condition, you are advised to seek other medical

opinions from health professionals before making any changes in your

health regimens. The reports on this website are for information

purposes only.

 

 

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets

 

 

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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