Highlights
- Relaxes tense muscles
- Eases aches and pains
- Softens and smoothes skin
- Helps with restless legs
- Treats magnesium deficiency
- Highly absorbable
Description
Magnesium Chloride Gel is a form of transdermal magnesium chloride that is absorbed quickly through the skin, delivering magnesium directly to cells.
Provides measurable relief from muscle tension, spasms, cramps, aches, and pains - and it softens skin!
Use Magnesium Chloride Gel at your massage therapy session, after a workout, a long day hunched over a desk - or anytime you experience symptoms of magnesium deficiency.
Formulated with plant-based Amigel for easy application, Magnesium Chloride Gel is equivalent in strength to our Magnesium Chloride Spray and is half the potency of our Magnesium Chloride Liquid.
Ingredients & Suggested Use
Ingredients: Each 1ml of gel contains 225mg of magnesium chloride, equivalent to 60mg of elemental magnesium.
Non-medicinal Ingredients: AmigelTM, a 100% natural gelling and stabilizing polysaccharide agent (no petroleum), Lavender oil, alcohol
Contains no fragrance.
Suggested Use:
Apply directly to the skin and rub into muscles.
Shower or wipe away excess after 20 – 30 minutes, to allow time for the magnesium to fully absorb.
Cautions and Warnings: For external use only. Keep away from the eyes.
Research
Clinical Studies
Can you really absorb magnesium through the skin?
Consider the evidence from clinical studies:
- A transdermal magnesium oil with a 31% magnesium concentration applied to the skin and via a foot bath was found to increase cellular magnesium concentration by 59.7% in 89% of study participants, measured through hair analysis1
- In a two-week pilot study, blood serum and urinary magnesium concentration significantly increased in a subgroup of non-athletes following the low-dose application of 56 mg of transdermal magnesium cream per day2
- Intracellular magnesium concentration significantly increased following the application of a transdermal magnesium chlorate spray to the skin for 4 months, measured by epithelial cell and blood serum analysis3
Sources
1. Watkins K, Josling PD. A pilot study to determine the impact of transdermal magnesium treatment on serum levels and whole body CaMg ratios. The Nutrition Practioner. 2010;14:1-7.
2. Lindsy Kass, Andrea Rosanoff, Amy Tanner, Keith Sullivan, William McAuley, Michael Plesset. Effect of transdermal magnesium cream on serum and urinary magnesium levels in humans: A pilot study. PLoS One. 2017;12(4):e0174817.
3. Fabio Piccini, Guglielmo Ragazzoni, Laura Valentini, Emanuela Faloia, Pietro Gobbi. Intracellular absorption of transdermal magnesium demonstrated by ESEM-EDS. Italian Journal of Anatomy and Embryology. 2014;119(1):1.
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