• Log in with Facebook Log in with Twitter Log In with Google      Sign In    
  • Create Account
  LongeCity
              Advocacy & Research for Unlimited Lifespans

Photo
- - - - -

what is a normal serving size for boron?

quantity

  • Please log in to reply
2 replies to this topic

#1 ironfistx

  • Guest
  • 1,184 posts
  • 67
  • Location:Chicago

Posted 09 March 2023 - 12:06 AM


Here's why I'm asking.

 

Most Boron products are 3mg.

 

Swanson makes one that by Albion that is bororganic glycine and it's 6mg. Why am I mentioning this? Because most boron products are a combination of products including boron aspartate. I am striving to avoid aspartic acid in my supplements.

 

So they have this product that ISN'T aspartate, but the amount is twice as much. Is 6mg too much?

 

I guess I could open it and pour half of it into water every other day.

 

Please note, there is a product by NOW that is 3mg of this form, but it's like 5x more expensive lol. I'm trying to save money. The Swanson one is 60 pills, the NOW one is 250.

 

Seems a little odd that this product is 6mg and everything else is 3mg.

 

Why am I thinking about Boron?

 

Because of a study I read that said people with more boron in their diet got less arthritis. https://pubmed.ncbi....ih.gov/7889887/

 

(bolds mine)

 

Since 1963, evidence has accumulated that suggests boron is a safe and effective treatment for some forms of arthritis. The initial evidence was that boron supplementation alleviated arthritic pain and discomfort of the author. This was followed by findings from numerous other observations epidemiologic and controlled animal and human experiments. These findings included a) analytical evidence of lower boron concentrations in femur heads, bones, and synovial fluid from people with arthritis than from those without this disorder; b) observation evidence that bones of patients using boron supplements are much harder to cut than those of patients not using supplements; c) epidemiologic evidence that in areas of the world where boron intakes usually are 1.0 mg or less/day the estimated incidence of arthritis ranges from 20 to 70%, whereas in areas of the world where boron intakes are usually 3 to 10 mg, the estimated incidence of arthritis ranges from 0 to 10%; d) experimental evidence that rats with induced arthritis benefit from orally or intraperitoneally administered boron; e) experimental evidence from a double-blind placebo-boron supplementation trial with 20 subjects with osteoarthritis. A significant favorable response to a 6 mg boron/day supplement was obtained; 50% of subjects receiving the supplement improved compared to only 10% receiving the placebo. The preceding data indicate that boron is an essential nutrient for healthy bones and joints, and that further research into the use of boron for the treatment or prevention of arthritis is warranted.


Edited by ironfistx, 09 March 2023 - 12:37 AM.


#2 johnhemming

  • Member
  • 322 posts
  • 123
  • Location:Birmingham, UK

Posted 09 March 2023 - 04:41 PM

I have taken 3mg boron for some time for the objective of preventing arthritis.  I don't know about other options for dosing.  I take lithium aspartate as well.



sponsored ad

  • Advert
Click HERE to rent this advertising spot for SUPPLEMENTS (in thread) to support LongeCity (this will replace the google ad above).

#3 Logic

  • Guest
  • 2,665 posts
  • 590
  • Location:Kimberley, South Africa
  • NO

Posted Today, 11:40 AM

Take a look at lubrication research using Boric Acid by Dr Ali Erdemir of (the DOE's) Argonne National Labs.

"The above results demonstrate that with a mixture of boric acid and an oil lubricant, the friction coefficients are reduced by 10 to over 1000% below those of the unmixed lubricant itself. The wear rates of pins are reduced by factors of 50 to 100 below those of pins tested in unmixed oil itself..."
https://patents.goog...t/US5431830A/en

Completely UNRELATED... or is it..???  :)
 
I have a feeling that if anyone took a look for boric acid or boric acid like molecules in the cartilage and synovial fluid in these subjects they may well have found some:
 

"...Examining the relationship between boron administration and OA prevalence around the world, researchers discovered that in areas where boron intake is greater than or equal to 1 mg/d, the estimated incidence of arthritis ranges from 20% to 70%. In contrast, in areas where boron intake is usually 3 to 10 mg/d, estimated incidence of arthritis ranges from 0% to 10%.55 The boron concentration has been found to be lower in the femur heads, bones, and synovial fluid of OA patients compared with individuals without OA.56..."
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm...les/PMC4712861/


While I take Boron as Boric Acid occasionally, I cant speak to it's anti arthritic effects,
I can say that adding it, dissolved (over-saturated) in hot water (more soluble), to a near dead old smokey engine's oil, was as miraculous as is implied in the linked patent.







Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: quantity

2 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 2 guests, 0 anonymous users