What Are the Side Effects of Glucosamine Sulfate?
This medicine is a natural amino monosaccharide, which is an important component necessary for the synthesis of proteoglycans in human articular cartilage matrix. Amino monosaccharides can stimulate chondrocytes to produce glycoproteins with normal multimeric structures, inhibit certain enzymes that can damage articular cartilage (such as collagenase and phospholipase A2), inhibit the production of superoxide radicals that damage cells, and prevent Corticosteroids and certain non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs damage the chondrocytes and reduce the release of endotoxin factors from damaged cells.
Glucosamine sulfate
- This medicine is a natural amino monosaccharide, which is an important component necessary for the synthesis of proteoglycans in human articular cartilage matrix. Amino monosaccharides can stimulate chondrocytes to produce glycoproteins with normal multimeric structures, inhibit certain enzymes that can damage articular cartilage (such as collagenase and phospholipase A2), inhibit the production of superoxide radicals that damage cells, and prevent Corticosteroids and some
- medicine interactions
- 1. This medicine can reduce the effect of antidiabetic drugs. The possible mechanism is that this medicine inhibits insulin secretion.
- 2. This drug can reduce the effects of doxorubicin, etoposide and teniposide. The possible mechanism is that the glucose-regulated stress protein causes the expression of topoisomerase to decrease.
- [Dosing Instructions]
- Should be taken while eating.
- [Usage and dosage]
- adult
- · Conventional dose
- · Take 2 capsules orally 3 times a day. Usually 4-12 weeks is a course of treatment, which can be extended as needed. The treatment can be repeated 2-3 times a year.
- specification
- Each capsule contains 314mg of glucosamine sulfate crystals (equivalent to 250mg of glucosamine sulfate).
- [Storage] shading and storage at room temperature.