That kind of message is clickbait and misleading. Magnesium is not something people should “never use” just because they take certain medications.
The real issue is drug interaction timing, not an absolute ban.
Here’s the accurate, safe explanation:
Magnesium and medications: what actually matters
Magnesium (including supplements or antacids containing magnesium) can reduce absorption of some medicines if taken at the same time.
That means you usually don’t need to avoid it completely—you just need spacing.
Common medicines affected
1. Antibiotics
- Examples: tetracyclines (like doxycycline), quinolones (like ciprofloxacin)
- Magnesium can bind to them in the gut and reduce effectiveness
2. Thyroid medication
- Example: levothyroxine
- Magnesium may reduce absorption if taken together
3. Osteoporosis drugs
- Example: alendronate
- Must be taken separately for proper absorption
4. Iron supplements
- Magnesium can interfere with iron absorption
How to use safely
- Separate magnesium and these medicines by 2–4 hours
- Follow doctor or pharmacist instructions
When magnesium can be risky (rare cases)
- Severe kidney disease
- Kidneys may not remove excess magnesium properly
- Very high doses can cause:
- Diarrhea
- Low blood pressure
- Weakness
Important reality check
- Magnesium is an essential mineral, not a dangerous drug
- It is widely used for:
- Muscle cramps
- Sleep support
- Deficiency treatment
Most warnings online are exaggerated to get clicks.
Bottom line
You do not need to avoid magnesium completely with medications. In most cases, you just need proper timing and correct dosage, not elimination.
If you want, tell me the medicine you saw in that post, and I’ll check whether there is a real interaction or just misinformation.
