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Nutrients

Magnesium Biomarker Test

Measure your Magnesium to understand nerve and muscle function, heart rhythm, insulin sensitivity, and bone and electrolyte status.

With Superpower, you have access to a comprehensive range of biomarker tests.

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Sample type:
Blood
HSA/FSA:
Accepted
Collection method:
In-person at the lab, or at-home

Key Benefits

  • Check your body’s magnesium status to support nerve, muscle, and heart function.
  • Spot magnesium deficiency or excess affecting muscle performance and nerve excitability.
  • Clarify causes of tremors, numbness, seizures, migraines, or muscle cramps.
  • Guide supplementation or IV replacement, especially with diuretics, PPIs, or uncontrolled diabetes.
  • Protect bone strength and insulin sensitivity, since chronic low magnesium worsens both.
  • Protect heart rhythm by identifying low levels behind QT prolongation and palpitations.
  • Track response to diet, supplements, or kidney disease with consistent repeat measurements.
  • Best interpreted with calcium, potassium, and kidney tests, plus your symptoms.

What is Magnesium?

Magnesium is an essential mineral and electrolyte (divalent cation, Mg2+). The body gets it from food and water, absorbs it in the small intestine, and balances it through the kidneys. About half to two‑thirds is stored in bone, most of the rest lives inside muscle and other cells, and only a small fraction circulates in the blood.

Magnesium is the quiet cofactor behind energy and signaling. It binds to ATP to form Mg‑ATP, the working fuel for hundreds of enzyme reactions that drive metabolism. It steadies nerve and muscle function—including heart rhythm—by shaping calcium flow and potassium transport. It supports DNA and RNA synthesis, protein building, and cellular antioxidant defenses. It helps regulate insulin action and glucose handling, influences blood vessel tone, and participates in bone remodeling through parathyroid hormone (PTH) and vitamin D pathways. In short, magnesium enables the body to make energy, transmit signals, and maintain structural and metabolic balance.

Why is Magnesium important?

Magnesium is the body’s quiet stabilizer. It sits at the heart of energy production (ATP), calms nerve and muscle firing, keeps heart rhythm steady, supports insulin signaling, and helps build bone. A serum magnesium test offers a window into these systems, though most magnesium resides inside cells and bone.

Most labs consider a normal blood range roughly 1.7–2.3, and interpretation generally aims for the middle. Because serum holds only a small fraction of total stores, values near the low end can still coincide with tissue depletion in some people.

When the number runs low, it often reflects gastrointestinal loss, renal wasting, or inadequate intake. Physiologically, low magnesium uncouples ATP-dependent pumps, heightening neuromuscular excitability and destabilizing cardiac conduction. People may notice muscle cramps, twitching, tremor, fatigue, headaches or migraines, palpitations, and numbness. It can drive down potassium and calcium, leading to tingling, spasms, and arrhythmias, and may worsen insulin resistance and glucose swings. Children and teens may present with muscle symptoms or seizures when deficits are significant. In pregnancy, serum tends to run lower from hemodilution, so results are read in context.

High magnesium is uncommon without kidney impairment or large exogenous loads. Excess dampens nerve and muscle activity, causing nausea, flushing, low blood pressure, slowed reflexes, weakness, confusion, and, at higher levels, heart block and respiratory depression; newborns can be sensitive if maternal levels are high.

Big picture: magnesium links energy metabolism, electrolytes (especially potassium and calcium), glucose control, vascular tone, and bone health. Persistently low values are associated with higher risks of arrhythmias, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and osteoporosis, while high values typically signal impaired renal clearance.

What Insights Will I Get?

Magnesium measures the magnesium concentration in blood. Magnesium is a core cofactor for ATP-driven reactions and stabilizes membranes and ion channels. It supports energy production, glucose–insulin signaling, nerve and muscle calm, cognitive function, vascular tone and heart rhythm, immune balance, and reproductive smooth‑muscle function. Small shifts can shape whole‑system stability.

Low values usually reflect poor intake or absorption, kidney or gut losses, or shifts during illness. Effects include reduced cellular energy, irritable nerves and muscles (tremor, cramps), and a more fragile heart rhythm; glucose control and blood pressure can worsen. It often coexists with low potassium and calcium.

Being in range suggests adequate intake and kidney regulation, with stable neuromuscular function, rhythm, and balanced glucose and vascular tone. Serum is tightly regulated and may not mirror body stores; there is no universal “optimal” within normal.

High values usually reflect impaired kidney excretion or substantial exposure to magnesium‑containing drugs (laxatives, antacids) or therapeutic magnesium in pregnancy. Effects include slowed reflexes, weakness, low blood pressure, slow heart rate (bradycardia) or heart block, and, if severe, respiratory depression. More common in kidney disease and older adults.

Notes: Serum reflects only a small fraction of total magnesium, so levels can be normal despite depletion. Hemolysis can falsely elevate results. Proton pump inhibitors, some diuretics, aminoglycosides, and platinum chemotherapy lower it; lithium and magnesium drugs raise it. Illness, acid–base shifts, and pregnancy hemodilution also affect interpretation.

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Get a comprehensive blood draw at one of our 3,000+ partner labs or from the comfort of your own home.

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Easy to understand results & a clear action plan with tailored recommendations on diet, lifestyle changes, supplements and pharmaceuticals.

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You can book additional diagnostics, buy curated supplements for 20% off & pharmaceuticals within your Superpower dashboard.

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100+ biomarkers & common symptoms

Developed by world-class medical professionals

Supported by the world’s top longevity clinicians and MDs.

Dr Anant Vinjamoori

Superpower Chief Longevity Officer, Harvard MD & MBA

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Clinician & Founder of The Centre for New Medicine

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Founder & Medical Director of Concierge MD

Dr Robert Lufkin

UCLA Medical Professor, NYT Bestselling Author

membership

$17

/month
Billed annually at $199
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Superpower
Membership

Your membership includes one comprehensive blood draw each year, covering 100+ biomarkers in a single collection
One appointment, one draw for your annual panel.
100+ labs tested per year
A personalized plan that evolves with you
Get your biological age and track your health over a lifetime
$
17
/month
billed annually
Flexible payment options
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Frequently Asked Questions

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How it works
What should I expect during a blood draw?
  • A trained phlebotomist will guide you through the process.
  • A tourniquet is placed on your arm, the site is cleaned, and a small needle is used to collect blood into one or more tubes.
  • Results are usually ready in about a week.
  • Most people feel only a quick pinch.
  • The needle is removed, gentle pressure is applied, and a bandage is placed.
How do I prepare for a blood draw?
  • Drink plenty of water beforehand — hydration makes veins easier to find.
  • Wear loose sleeves so your arm is easy to access.
  • Follow any fasting instructions you’ve been given.
  • Let us know if you’re on medications, have fainted before, or have needle anxiety.
What should I do after my blood draw?
  • Press gently on the site for a few minutes.
  • Keep the bandage on for 4-6 hours.
  • Skip heavy lifting or strenuous exercise for the rest of the day.
  • Drink extra water to rehydrate.
  • Monitor the site for redness, swelling, or pain.
How do I book a blood draw with Superpower?

Your membership includes:

  • An annual full body test and report across 100+ biomarkers
  • A personalized action plan to optimize your biomarkers and reach your health goals
  • A dashboard to centralize your health data and track changes across a lifetime
  • Access to a health concierge for questions on your plan and help scheduling
  • Plus a marketplace of curated health products and services cheaper than amazon

Many concierge clinics charge $10k – $100k for their services, we’ve built technology to make the world’s best healthcare as accessible as possible via an all-in-one membership.

Where can I take my blood test?

Superpower is currently available in the following US states:

  • Alabama
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  • District of Columbia
  • Florida
  • Georgia
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  • Maine
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota
  • Missouri
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • Nevada
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • Ohio
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Our testing
Does Superpower replace my primary care provider?

Superpower specializes in prevention-based testing and treatments and is not intended for emergency or immediate health issues.

While you will have a Superpower care team, your annual membership is designed to complement a primary care doctor if you have one, not replace them.

We are happy to help you share any test results with an outside provider to ensure you receive well-rounded medical care.

How fast are blood test results and how do I read them?

Your annual lab test panel takes about 10 days to process. We will text you as soon as they become available in your dashboard. Other types of tests may have different testing windows. The Superpower concierge is your own health assistant who helps answer your questions on your results, ensure smooth scheduling, coordination of any office-based tests, specialist referrals as needed, and navigating you to interface with your care team.

Does Superpower accept health insurance?

Superpower membership and products are all eligible for HSA/FSA funding.

We see Superpower like a gym membership for those committed to prevention and performance. Superpower is a bridge between wellness and healthcare. Health insurance traditionally focuses on reactive care whereas, at Superpower, we believe it’s never too early to start looking out for your long-term health.

What if I want more than 1 blood test per year?

Absolutely — you're not limited to just one. Your membership includes one comprehensive 100+ biomarker blood test each year, but if you'd like to track your progress more closely, you can add extra tests at any time. Each additional full-panel test costs $179. You can order as many as you'd like throughout the year.

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Frequently Asked Questions about Magnesium

What is magnesium and why is it important for the body?

Magnesium is an essential mineral and electrolyte that plays a critical role in numerous bodily functions. It acts as a cofactor for hundreds of enzyme reactions, particularly those involved in energy production (ATP), nerve and muscle function, heart rhythm, bone strength, and glucose-insulin signaling. Magnesium helps regulate calcium and potassium transport, supports DNA and protein synthesis, and maintains cellular antioxidant defenses. Most magnesium is stored in bones and cells, with only a small fraction circulating in the blood. Adequate magnesium is vital for metabolic balance, cardiovascular health, and neuromuscular stability.

How can I check my magnesium status and what does a serum magnesium test show?

A serum magnesium test measures the concentration of magnesium in your blood, providing insight into your body’s magnesium status. This test is especially useful for evaluating nerve, muscle, and heart function, and for identifying magnesium deficiency or excess. However, since most magnesium is stored in bones and cells, serum levels may not always reflect total body stores. The normal blood range is typically 1.7–2.3 mg/dL, but values near the low end can still indicate tissue depletion. The test is best interpreted alongside calcium, potassium, kidney function tests, and your symptoms.

What are the symptoms and causes of magnesium deficiency?

Magnesium deficiency can cause a range of symptoms, including muscle cramps, twitching, tremors, fatigue, headaches or migraines, palpitations, numbness, and, in severe cases, seizures. Causes include poor dietary intake, gastrointestinal loss, kidney wasting, certain medications (like diuretics and proton pump inhibitors), and chronic illnesses. Low magnesium can also lower potassium and calcium levels, leading to tingling, spasms, arrhythmias, and worsened insulin resistance. Children, teens, and pregnant women may be particularly susceptible to deficiency symptoms.

What are the effects and causes of high magnesium levels in the blood?

High magnesium levels (hypermagnesemia) are uncommon unless there is impaired kidney function or excessive intake of magnesium-containing medications (such as laxatives or antacids) or IV therapy. Symptoms of excess magnesium include nausea, flushing, low blood pressure, slowed reflexes, muscle weakness, confusion, slow heart rate, heart block, and, in severe cases, respiratory depression. Older adults and those with kidney disease are at higher risk. High magnesium usually signals reduced renal clearance or large exogenous loads.

How does magnesium support nerve, muscle, and heart function?

Magnesium stabilizes nerve and muscle cells by regulating calcium flow and potassium transport, which are essential for proper electrical signaling and muscle contraction. It helps maintain a steady heart rhythm and prevents abnormal excitability that can lead to tremors, cramps, palpitations, or arrhythmias. Magnesium also supports ATP-driven energy production, which is crucial for muscle performance and nerve function. Deficiency can heighten neuromuscular excitability and destabilize cardiac conduction.

Why is magnesium important for bone health and insulin sensitivity?

Magnesium is a key player in bone remodeling, working through parathyroid hormone (PTH) and vitamin D pathways to support bone strength. Chronic low magnesium can worsen bone density and increase the risk of osteoporosis. Additionally, magnesium helps regulate insulin action and glucose metabolism, improving insulin sensitivity and reducing the risk of type 2 diabetes. Persistently low magnesium is linked to higher risks of osteoporosis and metabolic disorders.

How do medications and medical conditions affect magnesium levels?

Certain medications, such as diuretics, proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), aminoglycosides, and platinum chemotherapy, can lower magnesium levels by increasing renal or gastrointestinal losses. Lithium and magnesium-containing drugs can raise magnesium levels. Medical conditions like uncontrolled diabetes, kidney disease, and gastrointestinal disorders also impact magnesium balance. Illness, acid-base shifts, and pregnancy-related hemodilution can further affect serum magnesium interpretation.

How should magnesium supplementation or IV replacement be guided?

Magnesium supplementation or IV replacement should be considered if you have symptoms of deficiency, are taking medications that lower magnesium, or have conditions like uncontrolled diabetes or kidney disease. Supplementation should be guided by repeat magnesium measurements, your symptoms, and related lab tests (calcium, potassium, kidney function). Over-supplementation should be avoided, especially in those with impaired kidney function, to prevent toxicity.

What are common misconceptions about magnesium testing and interpretation?

A common misconception is that normal serum magnesium levels always indicate adequate body stores. In reality, serum magnesium reflects only a small fraction of total body magnesium, and levels can be normal even when tissue stores are depleted. Hemolysis during blood draw can falsely elevate results. There is no universal “optimal” value within the normal range; interpretation should consider symptoms, related electrolytes, and underlying conditions.

How can I maintain healthy magnesium levels through diet and lifestyle?

To maintain healthy magnesium levels, consume a balanced diet rich in magnesium-containing foods such as leafy green vegetables, nuts, seeds, whole grains, and legumes. Stay hydrated and avoid excessive use of magnesium-depleting medications unless medically necessary. Regularly monitor magnesium status if you have risk factors like chronic illness, kidney disease, or are on medications affecting magnesium. Consistent repeat measurements can help track your response to dietary changes or supplementation.

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