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Re: Suffix: Gluconate

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I am wondering today what the suffix gluconate means. I've been experiencing

horrific leg cramps on account of my low carb diet and have been told to

supplement with potassium. the supplements I have been taking are called

potassium gluconate and say that they have 90 mg of potassium. But what is

the gluconate? I am worried that it is a sugar. Please reply if you have any

idea about this.

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You might need to be careful. I take Postassium, each tablet containing (as per

label), Elemental Potassium (Citrate)... 99mg.

I went a searching and I found a product, probably similar to yours. (Hopefully

the link doesn't get broken, if so, you'll have to paste it into your browser).

<ttp://www.drugstore.com/qxp75247_333199_sespider/rite_aid/natural_potassium_glu\

conate_99_mg_tablets.htm>

If you look at the bottom of the page under ingredients, the first ingredient is

Dextrose!

I'm no expert, but I wouldn't take it myself.

in ON

-----Original Message-----

From: Ann Giacometti [mailto:annmalia@...]

I am wondering today what the suffix gluconate means. I've been experiencing

horrific leg cramps on account of my low carb diet and have been told to

supplement with potassium. the supplements I have been taking are called

potassium gluconate and say that they have 90 mg of potassium. But what is

the gluconate? I am worried that it is a sugar. Please reply if you have any

idea about this.

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Hi,

The following is the only real definition that I could get

anywhere. I hope this helps. You may want to ignore some of the

medical jargon.

No. Gluconate is the acid form of glucose, a sugar. They might get

>>it from starch, but once it's broken down, it's not starch by

>>definition.

>

>No. Gluconic acid is the acid form. Gluconate is either an ester

or a

>salt.

You're right, of course. Potassium gluconate is the potassium

salt

of gluconic acid, analogous to the salts of other better known

carboxylic acids, like acetate and lactate. Or the salts of larger

fatty acids that make up soaps. Gluconic acid is basically glucose

with the aldehyde -CO-H function oxidized to the acid -CO-OH. This

compound is very hard to prepare in solid crystaline form, so you see

it commercially as 50% solutions, or else as the salt, in this case

R-COO- K+ , where R is the rest of the sugar.

> I am wondering today what the suffix gluconate means. I've been

experiencing

> horrific leg cramps on account of my low carb diet and have been

told to

> supplement with potassium. the supplements I have been taking are

called

> potassium gluconate and say that they have 90 mg of potassium. But

what is

> the gluconate? I am worried that it is a sugar. Please reply if

you have any

> idea about this.

>

>

>

>

>

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