Magnesium is the quiet workhorse of IV therapy. It doesn’t get the marketing spotlight that NAD+ or glutathione does, but in actual hospital and clinic practice, magnesium IV has more solid evidence behind it than most “wellness” ingredients combined. Here’s where the medical use is real, and where it isn’t.
What magnesium does in the body
Magnesium is a cofactor in more than 300 enzymatic reactions, including energy production (ATP), DNA repair, muscle contraction, nerve transmission, and blood-pressure regulation. Roughly half the population is mildly low in magnesium due to modern diet (low whole grains, low leafy greens). Severe deficiency causes muscle cramps, tremor, irregular heartbeat, and in extreme cases seizures.
Where IV magnesium has strong evidence
1. Acute migraine
IV magnesium sulfate (typically 1–2 g over 15–30 minutes) is part of the standard “migraine cocktail” in ERs worldwide. Particularly effective for migraine with aura. Often combined with Toradol, Zofran, and hydration in our migraine IV protocol.
2. Severe asthma exacerbation
IV magnesium is added to bronchodilator therapy for severe asthma not responding to standard inhalers. This is hospital-tier care, not outpatient — we mention it because patients sometimes ask about wheezing during a vacation IV. If you’re wheezing severely, that’s an ER.
3. Eclampsia and pre-eclampsia in pregnancy
IV magnesium sulfate is the first-line treatment to prevent and treat eclamptic seizures. Specialist territory; included here for completeness.
4. Severe hypomagnesemia
Confirmed low magnesium on labs — replaced IV when oral is inadequate or absorption is impaired.
5. Some cardiac arrhythmias
Particularly torsades de pointes; ER and hospital use.
Where IV magnesium has moderate or weak evidence
- Muscle cramps and tension — many patients report symptomatic improvement; the underlying evidence is mixed and probably depends on baseline magnesium status.
- PMS and menstrual cramps — some evidence; usually adequately treated orally.
- Sleep support — modest evidence for oral magnesium; IV is not a routine route for this.
- “Stress and anxiety relief” — popular wellness claim; limited evidence for IV specifically.
How much magnesium is in our IVs
A standard Myers Cocktail includes about 1 g of magnesium sulfate. Migraine IVs use 1–2 g. Standalone “magnesium boost” requests are uncommon in our practice; the physician usually adds it as part of a combination drip when clinically indicated.
Side effects to know
- Warmth or flushing — common, especially if infused quickly.
- Drop in blood pressure — usually mild; the rate is adjusted accordingly.
- Diarrhea — uncommon with IV but possible.
- Severe overdose — only at hospital-level doses; not a real risk at standard clinic doses.
Who should be careful with magnesium IV
- Severe kidney impairment — magnesium isn’t cleared well; dose-adjust or skip.
- On certain heart medications — particularly if there’s a risk of conduction slowing.
- Severe heart failure — the blood pressure drop can worsen things.
Where you’ll see it on our menu
Most of our IV drips include magnesium: Myers Cocktail, Migraine IV, Hydration, and severe dehydration protocols.
Marketing claims to ignore
- “Magnesium will cure your anxiety.” — There’s some evidence for oral; IV is not the right route for this.
- “Magnesium will reverse heart disease.” — Wrong on both directions and dose.
- “Magnesium will give you energy.” — It doesn’t increase energy in non-deficient patients.
Frequently asked questions
How fast does IV magnesium work?
For migraine, often within 30 minutes. For muscle cramps, similar.
Do I need IV vs oral magnesium?
For acute migraine or severe deficiency, IV is better. For maintenance, oral works.
What’s the difference between magnesium sulfate, citrate, and glycinate?
Different salt forms with different absorption profiles. IV uses sulfate; oral uses many forms.
Is magnesium IV safe in pregnancy?
Generally yes (it’s the first-line treatment for eclampsia), but the doctor will discuss dose specific to your situation.
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Educational, not medical advice. COFEPRIS-licensed clinic.