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Comparison

Magnesium Glycinate vs Semaglutide

Side-by-side of Magnesium Glycinate and Semaglutide. Every row below is pulled from the compound schema and will update as our data grows. For deeper reads, follow through to each compound page.

Effects at a glance

Magnesium Glycinate

  • Shortens sleep onset latency in older adults and in deficient populations supplementing 200 to 400 mg elemental Mg
  • Improves subjective sleep quality scores (PSQI, ISI) modestly versus placebo over 4 to 8 weeks
  • Reduces nocturnal leg cramps and exercise-induced muscle cramping in some controlled trials
  • Lowers self-reported anxiety in mild-to-moderate cases, with smaller effect than first-line pharmacotherapy
  • Glycinate form delivers fewer GI side effects than oxide or citrate at equivalent elemental doses
  • Insufficient as a stand-alone hypertension treatment; small adjunctive blood-pressure reductions only

Semaglutide

  • Long-acting GLP-1 receptor agonist with a ~7-day half-life that supports once-weekly subcutaneous dosing
  • STEP trials reported ~15 to 17% mean body-weight loss at 2.4 mg/week over 68 weeks in adults with obesity
  • Lowers HbA1c by ~1.0 to 1.8 percentage points in type 2 diabetes versus placebo
  • SELECT trial showed reduced major cardiovascular events in adults with prior CVD and overweight or obesity
  • Up to 25 to 40% of weight lost can be lean mass; pairing with resistance training and protein intake mitigates this
  • GI effects (nausea, vomiting, constipation) drive most discontinuations and ease with slow titration

Side-by-side

Attribute Magnesium Glycinate Semaglutide
Category supplement pharmaceutical
Also known as magnesium bisglycinate Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus
Half-life (hr) 5 168
Typical dose (mg) 300 2.4
Dosing frequency daily (often evening) weekly (SC); daily (oral Rybelsus)
Routes oral subcutaneous, oral
Onset (hr) 1 24
Peak (hr) - 72
Molecular weight - 4113.58
Mechanism Magnesium acts as a cofactor for 300+ enzymes and as a voltage-dependent antagonist at NMDA receptors; glycine serves as an inhibitory neurotransmitter and co-agonist at glycine receptors. Long-acting GLP-1 receptor agonist; potentiates glucose-dependent insulin secretion, suppresses glucagon, slows gastric emptying, and acts on hypothalamic satiety centers.
Legal status Dietary supplement Prescription only (FDA-approved, EMA-approved)
WADA status allowed allowed
DEA / Rx OTC supplement Rx only (not a controlled substance); FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes (2017) and chronic weight management (2021)
Pregnancy Generally considered acceptable at RDA doses; consult clinician Not recommended; discontinue 2 months before planned pregnancy
CAS 14783-68-7 910463-68-2
PubChem CID 84645 56843331
Wikidata - Q27089394

Safety profile

Magnesium Glycinate

Common side effects

  • mild GI upset at high doses
  • loose stools (dose-dependent, less than with oxide/citrate forms)

Contraindications

  • severe renal impairment
  • myasthenia gravis
  • heart block

Interactions

  • tetracycline and fluoroquinolone antibiotics: magnesium chelates antibiotic, reducing absorption; separate by 2+ hours(moderate)
  • bisphosphonates: reduced absorption of bisphosphonate(moderate)
  • potassium-sparing diuretics: possible hypermagnesemia in renal impairment(moderate)

Semaglutide

Common side effects

  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • diarrhea
  • constipation
  • decreased appetite
  • injection-site reactions
  • fatigue

Contraindications

  • personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma
  • multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2
  • pregnancy
  • history of pancreatitis (use caution)

Interactions

  • insulin: additive hypoglycemia risk; insulin dose typically reduced(major)
  • sulfonylureas (glipizide, glyburide): hypoglycemia risk, sulfonylurea dose often reduced(major)
  • oral medications (general): delayed gastric emptying can alter absorption kinetics(moderate)
  • warfarin: monitor INR due to altered absorption(moderate)

Which Should You Take?

Magnesium Glycinate comes out ahead for most readers on the criteria we weight: 3 catalogued goals, OTC dietary supplement, oral dosing, with a Tier-A outcome catalogued. Semaglutide is the right call when one of the conditionals below applies.

Edge case: If you want to avoid prescription-only, Magnesium Glycinate is the more accessible choice.

Default choice: Magnesium Glycinate. Lower friction to source, a Tier-A evidence outcome catalogued, and broader goal coverage. Reach for Semaglutide only if your priority sits squarely in the goals it owns above.

This verdict is generated from each compound's schema (goals, legal status, evidence outcomes, dosing route). It updates automatically as our compound data evolves; the deeper read sits on each individual compound page.

Common questions

What is the difference between Magnesium Glycinate and Semaglutide?

Magnesium Glycinate and Semaglutide differ in category (supplement vs pharmaceutical), mechanism, and typical dosing. See the side-by-side table for full details.

Which has a longer half-life, Magnesium Glycinate or Semaglutide?

Magnesium Glycinate half-life is 5 hours; Semaglutide half-life is 168 hours.

Can you stack Magnesium Glycinate with Semaglutide?

Stack compatibility depends on mechanism overlap, legal status, and individual response. Check each compound page for specific interactions and contraindications before combining.

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