Magnesium glycinate

Magnesium glycinate, also known as magnesium diglycinate or magnesium bisglycinate, is the magnesium salt of glycine (one magnesium and two glycine molecules), and is sold as a dietary supplement.[1][2] It contains 14.1% elemental magnesium by mass. Accordingly, 100 mg of magnesium is contained in 709 mg of magnesium glycinate.

Magnesium glycinate
Identifiers
ECHA InfoCard 100.035.305
UNII
Properties
C4H8MgN2O4
Molar mass 172.423 g·mol−1
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N (what is YN ?)
Infobox references

Uses

Magnesium glycinate has been studied with applicability to patients with a bowel resection[1] or pregnancy-induced leg cramps.[2]

gollark: If mgollark² is to occur, I would probably construct them by using Google Colab to obtain fast TPUs for training, then somehow having you download the 12GB of bee neuron data to something connected to this "coral TPU".
gollark: Not practical. For mgollark I just harvested some free Google computing power.
gollark: https://github.com/EleutherAI/gpt-neo seems to mention TPU support, although it wants high-powered "cloud" ones for training, no idea what it needs for inferencing.
gollark: Wait, you have a TPU, right citrons?
gollark: I was investigating GPT-3-ous mgollark, but this would use even *more* time unless I get a TPU somehow.

See also

References

  1. Schuette SA, Lashner BA, Janghorbani M (1994). "Bioavailability of magnesium diglycinate vs magnesium oxide in patients with ileal resection". JPEN. Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition. 18 (5): 430–5. doi:10.1177/0148607194018005430. PMID 7815675. Magnesium diglycinate may be a good alternative to commonly used magnesium supplements in patients with intestinal resection.
  2. Supakatisant C, Phupong V (2015). "Oral magnesium for relief in pregnancy-induced leg cramps: a randomised controlled trial". Maternal & Child Nutrition. 11 (2): 139–45. doi:10.1111/j.1740-8709.2012.00440.x. PMC 6860204. PMID 22909270. Forty-one women were assigned to magnesium bisglycinate chelate (300 mg per day) and 39 women to placebo. Details of leg cramps were recorded before beginning the treatment and the fourth week of study.
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