Boron vs Potassium (Citrate)

Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.

BoronPotassium (Citrate)
CategoryMineralsMinerals
Standard Dose3-6mg daily99-200mg per capsule (regulatory limit in US); dietary target 3500-4700mg/day total
TimingWith meals. Often taken with Vitamin D/K stack.With meals, divided throughout the day. Slow-release forms preferred for higher doses.
Cycle Durationongoingongoing
Evidence Levelmoderate_humanstrong_human
A

Boron

Minerals

Mechanism

Boron influences calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus metabolism, likely through effects on cell membrane function and transmembrane signaling. It reduces urinary calcium and magnesium excretion, increases serum 25(OH)D and estradiol levels, reduces SHBG (sex hormone-binding globulin) thereby increasing free testosterone, and inhibits inflammatory markers (CRP, TNF-alpha) via NF-kB modulation. Boron also inhibits serine proteases and may modulate the activity of steroid hormone hydroxylases. It plays a role in bone formation by influencing osteoblast and osteoclast activity.

Standard Dosing

3-6mg daily

Timing

With meals. Often taken with Vitamin D/K stack.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Nausea at high doses
  • Diarrhea
  • Skin rash (rare)
  • Generally very well tolerated at standard doses

Contraindications

  • Estrogen-sensitive cancers (boron increases estradiol)
  • Renal impairment (boron is renally excreted)

Best Stacking Partners

Vitamin D3MagnesiumCalciumZincTongkat Ali

Mechanism

Potassium is the principal intracellular cation, maintaining resting membrane potential (-70 to -90mV) via the Na+/K+-ATPase pump (3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in per ATP). It is essential for: cardiac rhythmicity (phase 3 repolarization of cardiac action potential), skeletal muscle contraction, nerve impulse transmission, acid-base balance (exchanged for H+ in renal tubules), blood pressure regulation (promotes natriuresis via renal sodium excretion), and insulin secretion. Citrate form provides alkalinizing anion that inhibits calcium oxalate and uric acid kidney stone formation.

Standard Dosing

99-200mg per capsule (regulatory limit in US); dietary target 3500-4700mg/day total

Timing

With meals, divided throughout the day. Slow-release forms preferred for higher doses.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • GI irritation/ulceration (non-microencapsulated forms)
  • Nausea
  • Diarrhea
  • Hyperkalemia (dangerous — cardiac arrhythmias)

Contraindications

  • Hyperkalemia
  • Renal insufficiency (impaired K+ excretion)
  • Addison's disease (aldosterone deficiency)
  • Concurrent ACE inhibitor/ARB + potassium-sparing diuretic

Best Stacking Partners

MagnesiumSodium (for electrolyte balance)Vitamin D3

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