1. Municipal Drinking Water and Cardiovascular Death
Rates
Henry A. Schroeder, MD, Jama, Jan 10, 1966, Vol 195, No 2,
125-129 http://www.mgwater.com/muni.shtml
2. Relations Between Hardness of Water and Death Rates from Certain Chronic and Degenerative Diseases in the United States. Schroeder, H.A. : J Chron Dis 12;586-591 (Dec) 1960 http://www.mgwater.com/chronic.shtml
3. Hardness of Local Water Supplies and Mortality from
Cardiovascular Disease
Morris J; Crawford M.D.; and Heady J.A.: Lancet 1;860 (April)
1961. http://www.mgwater.com/local.shtml
4. On the Relationship Between Water Hardness and Death Rates
in Cardiovascular Diseases
Biorck, G; Bostrom H; and Widstrom, A.: Acta Med Scand
178;239-252 (Aug) 1965. http://www.mgwater.com/death.shtml
5. Geographical Relationship Between the Chemical Nature of
River Water and Death-Rate from Apoplexy
Kobayashi, J: Berichte d Ohara Inst f landwirtsch Biologie
11:12-21 (March) 1957 http://www.mgwater.com/story.shtml
6. The Influence of Water Hardness and Rainfall on the
Incidence of Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Mortality In
Ireland, Mulcahy R.: J Irish Med Assoc 55:17-18 (July)
1964.
http://www.mgwater.com/irish.shtml
7. Cardio-protective Contribution of Hard Waters
(1978) The inverse correlation between water hardness and
incidence of cardiac fatalities was first reported in 1957, and
has since been observed in many regions of the world http://www.mgwater.com/marier.shtml
8. Epidemiology of Water Magnesium; Evidence of Contributions
to Health
An evaluation of the published data led Marx and Neutra, to
suggest the potential value of increasing Mg intakes. They
commented that adding Mg to the water would be a http://www.mgwater.com/epidem.shtml
9. Ischaemic heart-disease in a hard-water and in a soft-water
area
It is important to emphasise that the associations found between
cardiovascular mortality and softness of drinking-water are not
with ischaemic heart-disease only. http://www.mgwater.com/lancet.shtml
10. Water Hardness and Cardiovascular Mortality
Ever since Kobayashi in 1957, noted a parallel between the
geographic distribution of the acidity of water in Japanese
rivers and the distribution of what was then one of the http://www.mgwater.com/hardness.shtml
11. Drinking Water and Health
The EPA funded the study, which states that the rates of
cardiovascular death among populations drinking very soft water
may be http://www.mgwater.com/exhibitb.shtml
12. Magnesium, Water Hardness, and Heart Disease
It would appear that, in Ontario at least, the contribution of
water-borne Mg to total dietary intake may be critical, and that
some residents of soft-water areas are in a state http://www.mgwater.com/anderson.shtml
13. Magnesium in Drinking Water and Ischemic Heart
Disease
This paper reviews the strengths and weaknesses of the
epidemiologic evidence relating magnesium to the three stages of
the natural history of IHD. We also review the substantial
http://www.mgwater.com/marxneut.shtml
14. Magnesium in Oncogenesis
An inverse relation between cancer prevalence and the Mg content
of water and of soil and cancer was reported from worldwide early
studies, starting more than 50 years http://www.mgwater.com/cancer.shtml
15. Magnesium and Public Health
Magnesium in drinking water has been calculated to constitute
some 10% of the daily population intake. But the effect on public
health must be much larger. This we conclude from http://www.mgwater.com/public.shtml
16. Magnesium level in drinking water
Of all the cardiovascular risk factors, magnesium now takes first
place as judged by the accumulation of epidemiological,
pathophysiological, clinical and experimental data, http://www.mgwater.com/durwater.shtml
17. Municipal Drinking Water
(1966) The association of the degree of softness of municipal
water and death rates from hypertension and arteriosclerotic
heart diseases, demonstrated for 1949 to 1951 rates, http://www.mgwater.com/muni.shtml
18. Quantifying the Role of Magnesium
An attempt has been made to quantify the effect of waterborne
magnesium on human mortality/morbidity, based on epidemiological
and clinical observations reported in several http://www.mgwater.com/quantif.shtml
19. Drinking Water Quality and Sudden Death
Our data support the hypothesis that the quality of drinking
water plays a part in the difference in mortality from CHD
between the two study areas. http://www.mgwater.com/finland.shtml
20. Magnesium and calcium in drinking water
In summary, the present study suggests that mortality from
ischemic heart disease, particularly among men, can be related to
the amount of magnesium in drinking water. http://www.mgwater.com/calcium.shtml
21. Magnesium in Drinking Water
The results from this study strengthen the hypothesis that
magnesium in drinking water helps to prevent death from
myocardial infarction. An attempt to quantify the importance of
http://www.mgwater.com/rylandr.shtml
22. Herzinfarktinzidenz und Mineralgehalt des
Trinkwassers
(Article in German) In the district of Wernigerode with circa
105,000 inhabitants in the framework http://www.mgwater.com/teitge.shtml
23. Magnesium Seminar
Prof. Ragnar Rylander of Goteborg University, Sweden, was the
lead speaker at a seminar on magnesium in Emeryville, Ca., on
Jan. 9, 1995. Prof. Rylander is the author of http://www.mgwater.com/seminar.shtml
This page was first uploaded to The Magnesium Web Site in the fall of 2002
http://www.mgwater.com/