Glucosamine ReviewIn the summer of 1993 I was accumulating literature and preparing a three part series on glucosamine when I got scooped by my own publication. The September 12, 1993, issue of Dynamic Chiropractic contains an excellent article by Michael Murray, ND, on the treatment of osteoarthritis with glucosamine. I urge any readers who want in-depth information on glucosamine (definitions, biochemical action, and references) to read this article.In the last few years, interest in glucosamine has been on the rise. The majority of positive studies occurred in the late 1970s and early 1980s and were published outside the U.S. Maybe that's why it took almost a decade to catch on in America. These foreign studies show that ingestion of the sulfate form of glucosamine:
After discontinuing oral glucosamine sulfate therapy, symptoms did eventually return in patients with osteoarthritis. In my personal practice, after eight weeks of 1500 mg of glucosamine sulfate a day (10 mg per pound for larger and obese individuals), I have not been discontinuing therapy, but instead reducing doses to 500 mg per day. When initiating glucosamine therapy, patients should be informed that glucosamine treats a cause rather than a symptom and therefore, they will not have the immediate reduction in pain that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories produce. I show my patients summaries of studies where arthritic people who take glucosamine sulfate orally eventually feel better than those on anti-inflammatory medication. In my practice, I have observed favorable results with glucosamine therapy.
G. Douglas Andersen, DC, DACBSP, CCN |