What is the magic way to getting healthy sleep?
The MAGIC is in the MAGnesium!
It was followed by some of our favorite sleep tips and strategies to improve sleep naturally.
Today, we’ll cover nutritional support through food & supplements
for you to get the healthy sleep you need…
Magnesium is known to benefit the body in ways that counter stress, promote restful sleep, and support a healthy mood. In rats, magnesium administration attenuated neurologic changes brought on by chronic mild stress. [8]
Additionally, by increasing fear memory extinction, Magtein showed promise as a modulator of worry. [4,9] In human studies, magnesium supplementation partially reversed sleep changes associated with aging and improved objective and subjective measures of sleep. [10,12]
Improving sleep quality and countering the effects of chronic stress positively impact mood— another area that is beneficially influenced by optimal magnesium status. [8,9,13,14]
Without sufficient magnesium the body struggles to make and utilize protein and enzymes. It is also unable to properly methylate and detoxify and/or process and utilize anti-oxidants like vitamin C and E.
Magnesium is extremely critical for proper detoxification processes. As our world has gotten increasingly more toxic, our need for magnesium has increased. Meanwhile, the nutrition of our modern food has increasingly been diminished. This is due to over-cropping, poor composting and pesticides/herbicide chemical residue which reduces nutritional quality of the soil and produce.
We developed UltraMag-Brain in order to provide the best form of magnesium to improve brain function and neuronal health. This product helps you to focus, concentrate and perform at a significantly higher level. In addition, it is fantastic for reducing anxiety, while improving mood, memory and sleep.
UltraMag-Brain features key Albion forms of Magnesium (malate, lysinate & glycinate chelate) as well as magnesium L-threonate the only form of magnesium proven in animal studies to cross the blood-brain barrier. Boosting the brain’s magnesium level is vital to healthy cognition, which includes long and short-term memory, learning, stress management and sleep.
Get UltraMag-Brain for a one-time sale price of $33.68 +tax, when you mention this post.
You may also choose the larger quantity of 3 canisters (3-6 month supply) for $96.00 +tax.
Free shipping on orders of 3. Limited quantity in stock. 7% GA Sales Tax appliesTo learn more or to get your own bottle of UltraMag-Brain,
email admin@drgatchadc.com or call 770-948-2525.
Magtein is a groundbreaking organic magnesium compound that was developed by MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) researchers to support “brain power.”
When brain magnesium levels are not optimal, synapse function deteriorates. By delivering magnesium into synapses, Magtein helps brain cells stay healthy, without being overactivated; consequently, brain cells respond to signals with clarity and robustness.*
Studies show that Magtein crosses the blood-brain barrier and raises the brain’s magnesium levels, which result in increased magnesium deposits in neural synapses, increased neural synaptic density, and improved brain function. [2.4]
One animal study showed that when the bioavailability of several magnesium compounds was compared to controls, only Magtein significantly enhanced magnesium bioavailability and produced a significant increase (7% to 15%) in rat cerebrospinal fluid. [2] These small but significant increases in brain magnesium levels produced profound effects on neurological function.
Maintaining extracellular magnesium in the brain helps preserve synaptic density and keeps the synapses working properly. [2,5] By increasing magnesium concentration in the extracellular fluid, researchers observed permanent enhancement of synaptic plasticity in networks of cultured hippocampal neurons. [5]
Delving deeper into the mechanisms involved, later animal research showed that magnesium increased receptor signaling; specifically, the signaling of the NR2B-containing N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. NMDA receptors are rich in the hippocampus and play a pivotal role in memory processes.
Data from these studies suggest that increasing brain magnesium with Magtein “enhances both short-term synaptic facilitation and long-term potentiation and thereby supports synaptic plasticity and learning and memory functions in rats.” [2,3,6]
The benefits of Magtein were observed in several pre-clinical animal studies that used assessments, such as the NORT (novel object recognition test), T-maze, Morris water maze, conditioned fear memory, and conditioned taste aversion. In these studies, researchers demonstrated that when brain magnesium levels were increased, significant benefits were detected in multiple aspects of learning and memory in young and aged rodents. [2,4,7]
For instance, NORT tests performed by Slutsky et al revealed ≈135% improvement in short-term memory and ≈ 85% improvement in long-term memory of aged rats treated with Magtein as compared to control (untreated) rats.
One study examined the effects of Magtein in test mice (genetically altered mice that model age-related cognitive changes). Li et al found that the test mice not given Magtein exhibited “unequivocal learning deficits,” while the test mice given Magtein performed similarly to normal mice. [3]
In short, Magtein helped preserve normal brain function. When magnesium levels in the brain tissue were quantified, the relationship became even clearer: According to researchers, brain magnesium levels positively correlated with cognitive function; that is, the lower a mouse’s brain magnesium level, the poorer its memory function in the NORT task.
Furthermore, histological analysis of brain tissue showed that Magtein administration preserved synapse density and NMDA receptor signaling and also had positive effects on the expression of certain proteins associated with changes in memory. [3]
A large-scale human clinical trial has recently been completed. The results, publication forthcoming, support the in-vitro and animal findings that Magtein positively affects memory, cognition, and synapse density.