Meal effect on magnesium bioavailability from mineral water in healthy women.
The American journal of clinical nutrition
confidence
Key findings
~50% Mg absorbed from mineral water alone; absorption (52.3% vs 45.7%) and retention (41.5% vs 37.4%) significantly enhanced when consumed with a meal.
View source on PubMed (PMID 11756061) ↗
- Sample size
- 10
- Population
- Healthy young women
- Dosing
- Magnesium-rich mineral water (110 mg/L)
- Duration
- Not reported
- Route
- oral
- Blinding
- not_reported
- Controls
- none
- Drug class
- mineral supplement
Measured endpoints
- Apparent magnesium absorption (mineral water alone)Unclearmetabolicnot_reportedeffect: 45.7 +/- 4.6%
- Apparent magnesium absorption (mineral water with meal vs alone)Increasedmetabolicsignificanteffect: 52.3 +/- 3.9% vs 45.7 +/- 4.6%; relative difference 14.4%
- Magnesium retention (mineral water with meal vs alone)Increasedmetabolicsignificanteffect: 41.5 +/- 4.2% vs 37.4 +/- 4.0%; relative difference 11.0%
Full abstract
Magnesium intakes in many industrialized countries are below recommended daily allowances. Magnesium-rich mineral water may contribute to coverage of magnesium requirements by providing significant amounts of natural, energy-free, bioavailable magnesium. The objectives were to determine magnesium bioavailability from magnesium-rich (110 mg/L) mineral water in healthy subjects when consumed alone and to evaluate the effect of simultaneous meal consumption. Magnesium bioavailability was measured in 10 healthy women with the use of a crossover design. Stable magnesium isotopes ((25)Mg and (26)Mg) were administered orally with mineral water, which was consumed with or without a meal. Apparent magnesium absorption was determined by fecal monitoring, and magnesium retention was determined from urinary excretion of magnesium isotopes. The mean (+/-SD) magnesium absorption from mineral water consumed alone was 45.7 +/- 4.6% (range: 40.2-55.5%) and was significantly greater (P = 0.0001) when it was consumed with a meal (52.3 +/- 3.9%; 46.2-60.2%), a relative difference of 14.4%. Magnesium retention also was significantly greater (P = 0.0004) when mineral water was consumed with a meal (41.5 +/- 4.2%; 35.2-50.6%) than when consumed alone (37.4 +/- 4.0%; 33.1-47.0%), a relative difference of 11.0%. In healthy young women, approximately 50% of the magnesium from magnesium-rich mineral water was absorbed when consumed alone. Magnesium bioavailability from mineral water is enhanced when the water is consumed with a meal, perhaps because of a slower gastrointestinal transit time, the presence of digestion products from the meal, or both. Regular consumption of magnesium-rich mineral water could make a valuable contribution to magnesium requirements.