Comparing E332II - Tripotassium citrate vs E340III - Tripotassium phosphate

Synonyms
E332ii
Tripotassium citrate
potassium citrate
E340iii
Tripotassium phosphate
tripotassium phosphate
E 340iii
E340 iii
E-340iii
Tribasic potassium phosphate
Products

Found in 191 products

Found in 514 products

Search rank & volume
#9222.5K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2123.3K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×16.80
over-aware

×0.92
normal

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 6 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. How long should you take potassium citrate for?

    There’s no set “duration” when it’s present as a food additive; for therapeutic use it’s taken only as directed by a clinician, often long-term (months to years) with periodic monitoring of blood potassium and kidney function.

  2. How long should you take potassium citrate for kidney stones?

    Typically for months to years, adjusted to reach target urine pH/citrate and continued as long as stone risk persists, with regular checks of potassium and kidney function—your clinician sets the duration.

  3. Is potassium citrate good for you?

    As a food additive (E332ii) it’s generally considered safe at typical use levels; medically it can benefit certain kidney stone patients, but unnecessary or high intakes can be risky, especially with kidney disease or potassium‑sparing drugs.

  4. Can potassium citrate dissolve kidney stones?

    It can help dissolve uric acid stones (and sometimes cystine) by alkalinizing urine, but it does not dissolve calcium‑based stones; it also helps prevent new stones by raising urinary citrate.

  5. How much potassium citrate per day?

    There’s no consumer “daily amount” for its use as a food additive; for prescription therapy in kidney stones, typical doses are about 30–60 mEq/day in divided doses (individualized and monitored by a clinician).

  1. Is tripotassium phosphate bad for you?

    Not at the small amounts used in foods—potassium phosphates are generally recognized as safe (FDA) and EFSA sets a group ADI for phosphates of 40 mg phosphorus/kg body weight/day. People with chronic kidney disease or on potassium‑restricting medications should limit phosphate/potassium additives.

  2. What does tripotassium phosphate do to your body?

    It dissociates into potassium and phosphate ions, which the body uses for electrolyte balance, energy metabolism, and bone health; the amounts from typical food uses are small. Excess intake of phosphate or potassium can be problematic for those with impaired kidney function.

  3. How much tripotassium phosphate is in cheerios?

    The manufacturer doesn’t disclose the exact amount; it’s used in small quantities as a processing aid/buffer within regulatory limits. For a precise figure, you’d need to contact the brand directly.

  4. What is tripotassium phosphate in cheerios?

    It’s E340iii, added as an acidity regulator/buffering and stabilizing agent to aid processing, control pH, and help maintain texture and mineral dispersion. It’s used in small amounts and is not a vitamin or mineral fortificant itself.

  5. What is tripotassium phosphate in food?

    Tripotassium phosphate (E340iii) is a synthetic potassium salt of phosphoric acid used as an acidity regulator, emulsifier, sequestrant, stabilizer, humectant, and thickener.