I've had quite a bit of experience with IP6 over the past couple of years as I've been using it to chelate iron. I'm not an expert on this sort of thing, but here's what I've come to understand about it.
A lot of confusion about IP6 comes from differences in effects between consuming a diet high in foods containing phytic acid and taking isolated IP6 on an empty stomach as a chelator. Food high in phytic acid (or IP6 taken with meals) will bind and lock-up minerals in the GI tract preventing absorption and in extreme cases (extended daily consumption) cause deficiencies, thus its reputation as an antinutrient.
With a balanced diet low in phytic acid, mineral deficiencies (both major and trace) do not normally occur, however over the long haul, "over-mineralization" or buildup of some minerals to undesirable levels can and often does occur. Iron and copper are examples of minerals that while necessary and desirable in small amounts can become toxic and problematic when excessive levels are reached.
IP6, when taken on an empty stomach with a full glass of water is quickly absorbed into the blood intact (not already loaded up with minerals from food) and immediately starts snapping up its favorite minerals in blood plasma. Free/unbound (serum) iron, known to generate hydroxyl radicals (the most dangerous free radicals) and feed cancers (which LOVE iron) is substantially reduced, sharply reducing dangerous levels of oxidative stress via fenton reaction and starving any cancer that may exist of iron.
Serum levels of important and desirable minerals may also be reduced, but studies show these are quickly replaced by normal dietary delivery, particularly when the diet is low in phytic acid and thus rich in mineral delivery. Iron absorption however is regulated by hepcidin, and as long as shortages of stored iron do not occur, absorption of new/excess iron is largely blocked resulting in a desirable chelation of excess iron with IP6.
IP6 can't touch iron bound in hemoglobin or calcium in bones, but it may help chelate calcium from arterial plaques, which would be another major benefit of IP6 chelation if studies confirm this actually occurs.
I've found much of the dosing recommendations on IP6 to be a bit over the top, and I believe these recommendations for many grams of supplemental IP6 (often sold combined with inositol) must refer to the combination supplement "IP6 with Inositol" and not a stand alone IP6 supplement. The highest I've dosed stand alone IP6 was 500mg, twice a day for a total of 1 gram per day. I got some dental sensitivities when I tried higher doses. Stand alone IP6 is dirt cheap at around 10 cents a cap (Jarrow), but the combined IP6 with inositol supplements can be very pricey as this combination is what is used in cancer studies. I fear the combination supp's must be a rip-off on the cancer patients as inositol is also dirt cheap and could be easily purchased separately. The correct ratios shouldn't be that hard to figure out. I get plenty of inositol in my diet, and do not mega-dose IP6, so I simply take the cheap stand alone IP6 supplement.
Bottom line... Phytic acid, bad in foods/diet, but beneficial when supplemented between meals, again, always on an empty stomach with a full glass of water.
Some nuts and bolts details for you here:
http://www.pjoes.com...7.2/283-290.pdf"Effect of Inositol Hexaphosphate on Lipopolysaccharide-Stimulated Release of TNF-α from Human Mononuclear Cells"
Edited by synesthesia, 30 June 2013 - 05:16 PM.