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MagnesiumNutrition library

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Magnesium

mg · Minerals

A cofactor for hundreds of enzymes, supports muscle relaxation and may ease pregnancy-related cramps; also the cofactor for activating vitamin D.

How this interacts

Phytate vs. minerals
Phytic acid (IP6), concentrated in the bran/germ of grains, legumes and nuts, chelates zinc, iron and (more mildly) magnesium in the gut, blocking some of their absorption. The effect is dose-dependent: more phytate relative to the mineral means a larger blocked fraction. Vitamin C specifically counteracts phytate's effect on iron (not zinc) by forming an absorbable iron-ascorbate complex.

Trimester focus

StageFor the motherFor the baby
First trimesterSupports the major hormonal and metabolic shifts of early pregnancy.Supports cellular energy metabolism during organogenesis.
Second trimesterMay ease the leg cramps that often begin in this stage.Continues supporting growth-related enzyme function.
Third trimesterContinues easing cramps and supporting muscle relaxation ahead of labour.Builds fetal magnesium stores alongside continued growth.

Connections

See also

What links here

Evidence & sources

  1. Evidence-backed[1] Magnesium: a real but gentler phytate effect
    Phytate binds magnesium too, but the literature lacks zinc's crisp molar-ratio absorption bands, and magnesium's typical dietary molar abundance is far higher than zinc's — so this stays a day-level advisory flag (high phytate load + magnesium below target) rather than a re-based absorbed target.

Target note

The 350 mg UL applies to SUPPLEMENTAL magnesium only, not food.

Planning context, not medical advice — confirm supplement doses and screening (ferritin, 25-OH-D) with your healthcare provider.

Magnesium · Nutrition library