Potassium (Citrate) vs Vitamin D3

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

✅ Stacking Partners — These compounds are commonly used together and may have synergistic effects.
Potassium (Citrate)Vitamin D3
CategoryMineralsVitamins
Standard Dose99-200mg per capsule (regulatory limit in US); dietary target 3500-4700mg/day total5000 IU daily (125 mcg)
TimingWith meals, divided throughout the day. Slow-release forms preferred for higher doses.With largest fat-containing meal of the day (fat-soluble). Morning preferred.
Cycle Durationongoingongoing (lifelong for most people in northern latitudes)
Evidence Levelstrong_humanstrong_human

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
B

Vitamin D3

Vitamins

Mechanism

Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) is hydroxylated in the liver to 25(OH)D (calcidiol), then in the kidneys to 1,25(OH)2D (calcitriol), the active hormone. Calcitriol binds the nuclear vitamin D receptor (VDR), forming a heterodimer with RXR that regulates >1000 genes. Key actions: upregulation of intestinal calcium/phosphorus absorption (TRPV6, calbindin), modulation of innate immunity (cathelicidin LL-37 antimicrobial peptide production), suppression of adaptive immune overactivation (Th1/Th17 to Treg shift), regulation of PTH and osteocalcin for bone mineralization, and modulation of insulin secretion from beta cells.

Standard Dosing

5000 IU daily (125 mcg)

Timing

With largest fat-containing meal of the day (fat-soluble). Morning preferred.

Cycle Duration

ongoing (lifelong for most people in northern latitudes)

Side Effects

  • Hypercalcemia at excessive doses (>10,000 IU/day long-term without monitoring)
  • Nausea/vomiting (toxicity)
  • Kidney stones (with excessive calcium)
  • Metallic taste (toxicity sign)

Contraindications

  • Hypercalcemia
  • Granulomatous diseases (sarcoidosis, some lymphomas — unregulated 1-alpha hydroxylase conversion)
  • Primary hyperparathyroidism (without monitoring)
  • Williams syndrome

Best Stacking Partners

Vitamin K2 (MK-7)MagnesiumZincBoron

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