Glucosamine (2-Amino-2-deoxy-D-glucose · GlcN · Joint Cartilage Supplement)
| CAS No. | 3416-24-8 |
| Class | Carbohydrate · Amino Sugar · Monosaccharide · Hexosamine |
| Source | Commercial: hydrolysis of chitin from crustacean shells (shrimp, crab, lobster); plant-source glucosamine from Aspergillus niger fungal fermentation — for vegan/shellfish-free specifications |
| Claim strength | High |
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Glucosamine is one of the most extensively validated and commercially significant dietary supplements for joint health globally. As the most abundant amino sugar in human cartilage — a structural unit in chondroitin sulfate, hyaluronic acid, and keratan sulfate — its supplementation is hypothesised to support cartilage matrix synthesis and reduce the degradation associated with osteoarthritis. The compound has been studied in large-scale clinical trials including the GAIT (Glucosamine/chondroitin Arthritis Intervention Trial) study sponsored by the NIH.
Glucosamine for Joint Health, Cartilage Protection & Osteoarthritis — Evidence
Osteoarthritis symptom relief: Multiple meta-analyses of RCTs document statistically significant reductions in joint pain and improvements in function with glucosamine sulphate at 1,500mg per day in knee osteoarthritis. Effects develop over 4–8 weeks. Claim strength: High.
Cartilage structure — disease modification: Several long-term RCTs (3 years) with glucosamine sulphate document statistically significant reductions in joint space narrowing versus placebo. Claim strength: Moderate.
GAIT trial findings — nuanced interpretation: The GAIT trial did not show significant effects of glucosamine hydrochloride alone vs placebo in the primary analysis. However, a subgroup with moderate-to-severe pain showed significant benefit from the glucosamine + chondroitin combination. Glucosamine sulphate is generally considered the more evidence-supported form than glucosamine hydrochloride in European clinical practice. Claim strength: High (sulphate); Moderate (HCl).
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Dosage & Formulator Notes
Glucosamine sulphate at 1,500mg per day (as a single dose or split into 500mg three times daily) is the most clinically referenced dose for osteoarthritis. Glucosamine HCl at 1,500mg per day is the alternative form — higher glucosamine content per gram (82% vs 62% for the sulphate salt), but weaker clinical evidence. For vegan and shellfish-allergic consumers, plant-source or fungal fermentation glucosamine is the appropriate specification — confirm source on the CoA.
Pairs with: Chondroitin sulphate (the most established joint health combination), MSM (methylsulfonylmethane, sulfur donor for collagen synthesis), hyaluronic acid (joint fluid and skin health combination), boswellia extract (anti-inflammatory joint support), collagen hydrolysate (comprehensive connective tissue formulation).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between glucosamine sulphate and glucosamine hydrochloride?
Glucosamine sulphate has the strongest clinical evidence base — particularly from European long-term RCTs showing both symptomatic relief and potential cartilage-protective effects. Glucosamine hydrochloride has higher glucosamine content per gram (82% vs 62%) but the GAIT trial did not show significant effects for glucosamine HCl alone.
How long does glucosamine take to work?
Clinical trials consistently show meaningful symptomatic improvements develop over 4–8 weeks of daily supplementation. Unlike NSAIDs which provide rapid but temporary pain relief, glucosamine's effects develop gradually. The 4–8 week onset should be communicated clearly in consumer-facing product information.
Is glucosamine available from plant sources for vegan consumers?
Yes — plant-source and fungal fermentation glucosamine is available. Commercial plant-source glucosamine is produced by Aspergillus niger fungal fermentation of a non-animal substrate, providing a vegan-certified alternative. The glucosamine molecule is chemically identical regardless of source.
Should glucosamine always be combined with chondroitin?
Clinical evidence supports the combination for moderate-to-severe osteoarthritis specifically. For mild OA and general joint maintenance, glucosamine sulphate alone at 1,500mg per day has a strong evidence base.
Claim-strength scale – High = multiple human studies; Moderate = a few trials; Emerging = early lab data.
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