Supplements: Bioavailability Basics
Magnesium oxide bioavailability is approximately 4% vs 80% for glycinate chelate forms. Fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) absorb 50–80% better when taken with a meal containing dietary fat vs fasted.
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evidence Tier | 2 | tier | Tier 2 — bioavailability differences between forms are well-documented, but clinical outcome differences are less consistently studied |
| Magnesium Oxide Bioavailability | ~4 | % | Magnesium oxide has ~4% fractional absorption — cheapest but least bioavailable common form |
| Magnesium Glycinate Bioavailability | ~80 | % | Amino acid chelate forms (glycinate, malate, threonate) absorb via peptide transporters, achieving 60–80% fractional absorption |
| Fat-Soluble Vitamin Absorption Increase (with fat) | 50–80 | % | Vitamins A, D, E, K all show substantially improved absorption when co-ingested with dietary fat (Gröber 2015) |
| First-Pass Metabolism Reduction | Varies | form | Sublingual, liposomal, and transdermal delivery bypass hepatic first-pass metabolism — relevant for B12, magnesium, glutathione |
| Omega-3 Triglyceride vs Ethyl Ester Absorption | ~70 | % higher (TG form) | Triglyceride-form omega-3s absorb approximately 70% better than ethyl ester form, especially in fasted state |
The Absorption–Activity Pipeline
Bioavailability is the fraction of an ingested dose that reaches systemic circulation in active form. For supplements, this involves: dissolution in the gut, absorption across the intestinal epithelium, potential hepatic first-pass metabolism, and distribution to target tissues. A compound can fail at any step.
The critical insight: a supplement can be 100% pure and accurately labeled but deliver only 4% of its stated dose to blood (magnesium oxide). Conversely, a product with a lower stated dose of a more bioavailable form may deliver more active compound.
Delivery Form and Bioavailability
| Delivery Form | Bioavailability | Example Supplements | Timing Notes | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard oral tablet/capsule | Varies (10–90%) | Creatine, B vitamins, vitamin C | Generally timing-flexible | Most common; dissolution rate matters |
| Amino acid chelate | 60–80% (minerals) | Magnesium glycinate, zinc bisglycinate, iron bisglycinate | With or without food | Uses peptide transporters; avoids competition |
| Oxide/carbonate (minerals) | 4–20% | Magnesium oxide, calcium carbonate | With food for carbonates | Cheap; poor absorption, high GI side effects |
| Liposomal | Enhanced vs standard | Vitamin C, glutathione, magnesium L-threonate | Fasted often preferred | Lymphatic absorption partially bypasses first-pass |
| Phospholipid complex | 20–29× vs standard | Curcumin-Meriva, silymarin-Phytosome | With food | Merges compound with lecithin phospholipids |
| Fat-soluble in oil capsule | Requires dietary fat | Vitamin D, K2-MK7, CoQ10, omega-3 | Take with fat-containing meal | Absorption drops dramatically if taken fasted |
| Sublingual / buccal | Bypasses first-pass | B12 (methylcobalamin), melatonin | No food required | Direct mucosal absorption into bloodstream |
Lipophilic vs Hydrophilic: The Fundamental Split
Hydrophilic (water-soluble) compounds — vitamin C, B vitamins, creatine — dissolve readily in gut fluid and absorb via aqueous transport. They are generally timing-flexible and food-independent, though absorption becomes saturation-limited at high doses (vitamin C absorption falls from ~90% at 200mg to ~50% at 1250mg).
Lipophilic (fat-soluble) compounds — vitamins A, D, E, K; CoQ10; curcumin; omega-3 fatty acids — require incorporation into bile acid micelles for intestinal absorption. Without co-ingested dietary fat to trigger bile secretion, absorption can fall 50–80%. This is not marketing nuance; it is basic enterocyte physiology.
The Magnesium Form Example in Detail
Magnesium is the most instructive bioavailability case. Oxide is the predominant form in cheap supplements because it is 60% elemental magnesium by weight (so a small pill can claim 300mg). But fractional absorption is ~4%, so 300mg magnesium oxide delivers ~12mg to circulation. Magnesium glycinate is 14% elemental magnesium by weight, requiring larger or more capsules, but at ~80% absorption, 200mg elemental magnesium glycinate delivers ~160mg — over 13× more despite appearing to contain less.
Related Pages
Sources
- Schuchardt JP & Hahn A. (2017). Intestinal absorption and factors influencing bioavailability of magnesium. Curr Nutr Food Sci 13(4):260–278.
- Grosso G et al. (2013). Omega-3 fatty acids and depression: scientific evidence and biological mechanisms. Oxid Med Cell Longev 2014:313570.
- Gröber U et al. (2015). Magnesium in prevention and therapy. Nutrients 7(9):8199–8226.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is first-pass metabolism and why does it matter for supplements?
First-pass metabolism occurs when an orally ingested compound is absorbed from the gut into the portal circulation and then extensively metabolized by the liver before reaching systemic circulation. For some compounds, this reduces effective bioavailability by 50–90%. Sublingual delivery (under the tongue) and intravenous delivery bypass this entirely. Liposomal encapsulation partially bypasses it by entering lymphatics rather than portal circulation.
Does it matter whether I take supplements with or without food?
Yes, significantly for some supplements. Fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) and fat-soluble compounds like CoQ10 and curcumin absorb 50–80% better with a fat-containing meal. Conversely, calcium competes with iron for absorption, so they should not be co-administered. Magnesium and zinc can compete at shared transporter sites at high doses. Creatine and beta-alanine are relatively insensitive to food co-ingestion.
Are expensive 'enhanced bioavailability' forms always worth the premium?
Not always. For magnesium, the difference between oxide (4%) and glycinate (~80%) is clinically significant enough to justify the cost premium. For curcumin, phospholipid complex (Meriva) and piperine-enhanced forms show genuine absorption improvements in pharmacokinetic studies. But for many compounds marketed with 'enhanced bioavailability,' the base bioavailability is already adequate, and the premium form offers marginal real-world benefit.
How does individual variation affect supplement bioavailability?
Substantially. Gut transit time, gastric pH, microbiome composition, transporter gene variants, and fed/fasted state all affect absorption. Individuals with inflammatory bowel conditions, low gastric acid (including those on PPIs), or SIBO may have significantly impaired absorption of magnesium, B12, iron, and fat-soluble vitamins. This is why serum testing (25-OH vitamin D, ferritin, B12) is more informative than assuming standard-dose supplements are adequate.