Buck D R, Mahoney A W, Hendricks D G
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 1979 Apr;10(4):487-91. doi: 10.1016/0091-3057(79)90222-3.
Cerebral intraventricular injections of 17 and 50 microgram magnesium in artificial cerebrospinal fluid progressively depressed the Non-specific Excitability Level of permanently cannulated 150--200 g rats fed a low magnesium diet for 21 days. Compared with control diet, a low Mg diet caused an increase in brain serotonin. Weanling rats fed a low Mg diet for 2 weeks, then injected with 25 microgram Mg via acute cannulations, displayed reduced audiogenic seizure susceptibility compared with sham-injected controls.