Official resources
Fact sheets from the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements related to this ingredient group.
- Phosphorus - Clinical trials (PubMed)
- Phosphorus - Dose and administration (PubMed)
- Phosphorus - Adverse effects (PubMed)
- Phosphorus - Contraindications (PubMed)
- Phosphorus - Mechanism of action (PubMed)
- Phosphorus - Kinetics (PubMed)
- Phosphorus - Poisoning (PubMed)
- Phosphorus - Dietary supplement use in human (PubMed)
Dietary Supplement Label Database
Ingredient group data in NutriNav is aligned with the NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database (DSLD).
- DSLD group id
- 102
Compare All Forms
2 formsCompare supplement forms of Phosphorus by absorption quality and what your body actually gets from each:
| Form | Absorption | Steps to absorb | Notes | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phosphorus | — | — | — | View → |
| Phosphorus oxide | — | — | — | View → |
Type: Minerals
Inorganic elements essential for various physiological functions including bone formation, nerve function, and enzyme activity.
Absorption: Minerals often compete for absorption. Chelated forms generally have better bioavailability.
Interactions: High doses of some minerals can interfere with absorption of others. Some minerals can interact with medications.