Comparing E578 - calcium gluconate vs E577 - Potassium gluconate

Synonyms
E578
calcium gluconate
E577
Potassium gluconate
Products

Found in 2 products

Found in 4 products

Search rank & volume
#11217K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1726.6K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×355.82
over-aware

×107.88
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. What is calcium gluconate used for?

    In foods (E578) it acts as a sequestrant and calcium source to improve stability and fortify products; medically it’s used to treat hypocalcemia, protect the heart in severe hyperkalemia, counter magnesium toxicity, and manage hydrofluoric acid exposure.

  2. How does calcium gluconate treat hyperkalemia?

    It doesn’t lower potassium; it stabilizes cardiac cell membranes by increasing extracellular calcium, reducing excitability and the risk of life‑threatening arrhythmias within minutes (effect ~30–60 minutes).

  3. What does calcium gluconate do?

    As a food additive it binds metal ions to prevent quality loss and supplies calcium; as a medicine it replaces calcium, stabilizes the myocardium in hyperkalemia, and treats hypocalcemia and magnesium toxicity.

  4. What is calcium gluconate the antidote for?

    It is an antidote for hydrofluoric acid exposure (topical/systemic) and for magnesium toxicity; it may also be used as an adjunct in calcium channel blocker overdose.

  5. How to administer calcium gluconate injection?

    By healthcare professionals only as slow IV push or infusion (not IM or subcutaneous due to tissue damage); a common adult dose for cardioprotection/hypocalcemia is 10 mL of 10% solution (1 g) over 5–10 minutes with ECG monitoring, repeat as needed. Avoid mixing with bicarbonate or phosphate solutions and monitor for extravasation.

  1. How much potassium gluconate should i take daily?

    There’s no universal dose—use it only to meet your potassium needs and follow medical guidance. In the U.S., OTC tablets typically provide 99 mg elemental potassium (about 590–600 mg potassium gluconate); the adult AI for total potassium is ~2,600–3,400 mg/day from all sources.

  2. Is potassium gluconate the same as potassium?

    No—it's the potassium salt of gluconic acid that releases potassium ions in the body. By weight it’s about 16.7% elemental potassium, not pure potassium metal.

  3. How much potassium gluconate per day?

    Use only enough to meet your potassium requirement and as directed by your clinician. Common OTC servings provide 99 mg potassium (~590–600 mg potassium gluconate); excessive intake can be dangerous, especially with kidney disease or medicines that raise potassium.

  4. Potassium gluconate para que sirve?

    Como aditivo alimentario (E577) actúa como secuestrante y aporta potasio. Como suplemento, se usa como fuente de potasio para apoyar el equilibrio de electrolitos y la función muscular y nerviosa.

  5. What is potassium gluconate good for?

    As a food additive (E577) it’s used as a sequestrant and potassium source to help stabilize foods. As a supplement it provides potassium to support normal fluid balance, nerve transmission, and muscle function.