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Evidence suggests Magnesium maydecreaseChronic pain.
2 studies (1 claims)
Insufficient evidence
Study Claims
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Type | Population | Dosage | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| magnesium | Decreases - exerts analgaesic effects | neuropathic chronic pain | Human | patients | Magnesium oxide (specific dosage not mentioned). | MAGnesium-oral supplementation to reduce PAin in patients with severe PERipheral arterial occlusive disease: the MAG-PAPER randomised clinical trial protocol.cited 5× |
| magnesium-L-threonate | No effect - reported chronic pain | chronic pain incidence | Human | patients | Not specified in the abstract. | A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Therapeutic Effect of Magnesium-L-Threonate Supplementation for Persistent Pain After Breast Cancer Surgery.cited 1× |