zinc
9 interactions related to zinc
calcium + zinc
A large calcium dose may modestly reduce zinc absorption in some conditions, but human evidence is mixed and the effect is not clinically dangerous.
iron + zinc
High-dose iron and zinc supplements can compete for absorption in the small intestine when taken together, especially in solution on an empty stomach, potentially reducing the effectiveness of one or both minerals. The competition is minimal when the minerals are taken with food or hours apart, or at ordinary dietary amounts.
tetracycline + zinc
Zinc forms a chelate with tetracycline in the gastrointestinal tract, modestly reducing absorption of the antibiotic. The interaction also reduces zinc absorption. Doxycycline is much less affected.
zinc + copper
Zinc and copper are both essential trace minerals that share the same absorption machinery in the small intestine. Taken alone over time, sustained higher-dose zinc slowly works against your copper stores.
vitamin a + zinc
Zinc is required for the liver to synthesize retinol-binding protein, the carrier that moves vitamin A from liver stores into the bloodstream. When zinc is low, circulating vitamin A can stay low even though liver stores are adequate, and in deficient populations supplementing the two together corrects vitamin A status more reliably than vitamin A alone.
zinc + vitamin c
Zinc and vitamin C act on complementary arms of the immune system: zinc supports T-cell, B-cell, and natural killer cell function and can interfere with rhinovirus replication in the throat, while vitamin C supports white blood cell function and maintains skin and mucosal barriers. Taken together, the pair may modestly shorten and ease common cold symptoms when started early, though the human evidence for the combination specifically is limited.
alcohol + zinc
Chronic alcohol use lowers the body's zinc through reduced intake, impaired intestinal absorption, increased urinary loss, and altered zinc transporters (notably ZIP14). The relationship is bidirectional: zinc deficiency in turn worsens alcohol-related liver injury by weakening the intestinal barrier, allowing more bacterial endotoxin to leak into the portal blood, and reducing the liver's antioxidant defenses.
elderberry + zinc
Elderberry (Sambucus nigra) anthocyanins show antiviral and anti-inflammatory activity in lab and some clinical studies, and zinc lozenges have moderate evidence for shortening colds when started early. People often combine them at the first sign of a cold or flu. They act on different parts of the infection cycle, but no trial has tested the elderberry-plus-zinc combination itself, so any added benefit from stacking is extrapolated rather than proven. The realistic effect is shortening, not preventing, an upper-respiratory infection.
magnesium + zinc
At high supplemental doses, zinc and magnesium can each modestly reduce the other's absorption in the gut — and the better-documented direction is zinc lowering magnesium absorption, not the reverse. The effect is minor and dose-dependent; ordinary multivitamin amounts rarely matter.
