Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.
| Chromium Picolinate | Iron Bisglycinate | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Minerals | Minerals |
| Standard Dose | 200-500 mcg chromium picolinate daily | 25-36mg elemental iron (as bisglycinate) daily for deficiency correction |
| Timing | With meals, particularly carbohydrate-containing meals. Split dosing for higher amounts. | On empty stomach or with vitamin C for absorption. Alternate day dosing (every other day) may be superior due to hepcidin cycling. Separate from calcium, zinc, tea, coffee by 2+ hours. |
| Cycle Duration | ongoing or cycle 12 weeks on, 4 weeks off | Until ferritin >50 ng/mL, then reassess (typically 3-6 months). Not for ongoing supplementation unless chronic blood loss. |
| Evidence Level | moderate_human | strong_human |
Chromium potentiates insulin signaling by enhancing insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity, likely through the chromodulin (low-molecular-weight chromium-binding substance) pathway. Chromodulin amplifies insulin receptor autophosphorylation by 8-fold, enhancing downstream IRS-1/PI3K/Akt signaling and GLUT4 translocation. Chromium also activates AMPK, increases insulin receptor number on cell surfaces, and may reduce hepatic glucose output. Picolinate chelation enhances absorption from <3% (chromium chloride) to ~10%.
200-500 mcg chromium picolinate daily
With meals, particularly carbohydrate-containing meals. Split dosing for higher amounts.
ongoing or cycle 12 weeks on, 4 weeks off
Iron is essential for hemoglobin (oxygen transport), myoglobin (muscle oxygen storage), cytochrome enzymes (electron transport chain — Complexes I, II, III, IV), cytochrome P450 enzymes (drug/hormone metabolism), catalase (H2O2 decomposition), ribonucleotide reductase (DNA synthesis), and aconitase (Krebs cycle). Iron bisglycinate (Ferrochel) uses amino acid chelation to bypass the normal DMT1/ferroportin pathway, instead being absorbed intact via PepT1 transporter. This mechanism avoids the GI side effects of ionic iron (free Fe2+ generates hydroxyl radicals via Fenton reaction in the gut lumen) and is not inhibited by phytates, tannins, or calcium.
25-36mg elemental iron (as bisglycinate) daily for deficiency correction
On empty stomach or with vitamin C for absorption. Alternate day dosing (every other day) may be superior due to hepcidin cycling. Separate from calcium, zinc, tea, coffee by 2+ hours.
Until ferritin >50 ng/mL, then reassess (typically 3-6 months). Not for ongoing supplementation unless chronic blood loss.
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