That “NEVER use magnesium if you’re taking any of the following medications” framing is another overly absolute, clickbait-style warning.
The reality is more nuanced:
Magnesium can interact with some medications — but it’s not universally forbidden.
Magnesium mainly causes problems because it can bind to certain drugs in the gut and reduce absorption, or occasionally affect mineral balance. Timing often fixes the issue.
Here are the main medication groups where caution matters:
1) Certain antibiotics
- Examples: tetracyclines (like doxycycline), fluoroquinolones (like ciprofloxacin)
- Issue: magnesium can reduce absorption
- Fix: separate by 2–6 hours
2) Thyroid medication
- Example: levothyroxine
- Issue: reduced absorption
- Fix: take magnesium at least 4 hours apart
3) Osteoporosis drugs (bisphosphonates)
- Example: alendronate
- Issue: absorption interference
- Fix: separate dosing by several hours
4) Some muscle relaxants / sedatives (less common concern)
- Magnesium may slightly enhance drowsiness in high doses, but this is usually mild.
5) People with kidney disease
- This is the real serious caution:
kidneys remove excess magnesium, so impaired function can lead to buildup.
What’s wrong with the “NEVER” claim?
It implies:
- magnesium is inherently dangerous with many drugs ❌
- all combinations are unsafe ❌
In reality:
- most interactions are manageable with timing
- magnesium is widely used safely, even as a supplement
Bottom line
A more accurate statement would be:
“Magnesium may interfere with absorption of certain medications, so timing and medical guidance matter.”
If you want, you can paste the full list you saw after that line—I can go through it and tell you which ones are real concerns and which are exaggerated.