Magnesium Deficiency Is Behind Your Fatigue, Anxiety, and Muscle Cramps, And Most Indian Diets Fall Short
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 03, 2026, 07:02 IST
Magnesium Deficiency Is Behind Your Fatigue, Anxiety, and Muscle Cramps, And Most Indian Diets Fall Short
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Magnesium is involved in over 300 enzymatic reactions, yet deficiency is widespread and routinely missed. The symptoms, poor sleep, anxiety, muscle cramps, fatigue, mimic a dozen other conditions, which is why it stays undiagnosed. If your diet leans on polished rice, white bread, or processed snacks, your magnesium absorption is likely lower than you think.
The mineral your blood test won't catch
The mineral is a cofactor in over 300 enzymatic reactions: energy production, protein synthesis, blood sugar regulation, and the electrical signalling that keeps your heart beating in rhythm. When intake drops, none of these processes fails completely, they just run worse. That's what makes deficiency so easy to miss.
Why Indian diets are particularly exposed
Rajma, chana, moong, and urad dal are genuinely good sources. So are methi leaves, amaranth, and pumpkin seeds. But absorption matters as much as intake. Phytic acid in unsoaked legumes binds magnesium and reduces how much the gut can take up. Soaking legumes overnight and discarding the water, a step many households already follow for digestive reasons, measurably improves mineral absorption. Excess calcium supplementation, which many Indian women take for bone health, can also compete with magnesium at the absorption level when the two are taken together without adequate spacing.
What low magnesium actually feels like
Chronic fatigue that doesn't improve with rest is the symptom most likely to send someone down the wrong diagnostic path. Because magnesium is central to ATP synthesis, the process by which cells generate usable energy, low levels mean cells are producing energy less efficiently. The tiredness is real. It just has a mineral cause that a B12 test or thyroid panel won't surface.
How to actually correct it
If supplementation is warranted, the form matters. Magnesium oxide is the cheapest and most widely available, but it has poor bioavailability and is primarily used as a laxative. Magnesium glycinate is better absorbed and gentler on the gut. Magnesium citrate sits between the two. Anyone with kidney disease should not supplement without medical supervision, since impaired kidneys cannot clear excess magnesium efficiently.
Alcohol, high-sugar diets, and some diuretics all increase urinary magnesium loss. If any of these are consistent factors, dietary intake needs to account for the additional drain.
The conditions that keep getting misattributed
None of this means magnesium is a cure. It means that when these conditions are present alongside the dietary patterns and symptom clusters described above, checking magnesium status is a reasonable first step that often gets skipped.
The pattern across all of it is the same: a mineral so fundamental to basic cell function that its absence doesn't produce one clear disease, it produces a diffuse, overlapping set of complaints that each look like something else. The deficiency hides in the diagnosis of whatever condition the symptoms most resemble.