Wednesday, 08 Feb 2012
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Glucosamine Hydrochloride – Protecting Glucosamine from Moisture

Nancy Markowitz 

Many consumers suffering from the pain of osteoarthritis have turned to glucosamine for relief from their symptoms. While the most common dosage is 1500mg per day, the amount of that glucosamine that actually gets to the problem areas depends on the formula of the supplement you’re taking. Since glucosamine tends to deteriorate easily in the presence of water, it’s often combined with salts in order to keep the water from getting to it. Glucosamine hydrochloride is a popular formula that prevents the glucosamine from breaking down. Glucosamine hydrochloride causes the water to bond with the hydrochloride instead of the glucosamine, leaving more glucosamine to get to your joints. Glucosamine Hydrochloride just might be the best way to keep the glucosamine stable until you need it.

Glucosamine HydrochlorideIf you’ve ever set a glass of ice water out on a hot day, then you know that there’s a lot of moisture in the air. After a few minutes, the glass will be covered in beads of condensation: as the air around the glass cools, the moisture in the air clings to the glass. Glucosamine hydrochloride works to protect the glucosamine from the moisture in the air. The hydrochloride in glucosamine hydrochloride can act as a physical barrier to moisture, and if that barrier is breached, it will bind with the moisture to prevent the glucosamine from deteriorating. Glucosamine Hydrochloride is extremely effective at keeping glucosamine pure.

Glucosamine hydrochloride not only protects glucosamine from the water in the air, but also from the water in you. From the time you take the glucosamine hydrochloride, probably with a glass of water, the supplement will encounter a lot of moisture in your body. The human body is about seventy percent water, and it will all try to bond with the Glucosamine Hydrochloride you just took. Fortunately, the hydrochloride will bond with as much of the water as possible, leaving more glucosamine for your joints.

The more glucosamine there is in glucosamine hydrochloride, the more there is to protect from moisture. But the purpose of Glucosamine Hydrochloride is to keep as much of that glucosamine as possible intact for your joints to use. Fortunately, the hydrochloride is even more hygroscopic than the glucosamine, so it’s able to do a fair job, down to the very last molecule of hydrochloride. When you take Glucosamine Hydrochloride, you know that you’re getting as much glucosamine that you can possibly get in one pill.

 

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