| Title:  Guar Gum CAS Registry Number:  9000-30-0 Additional Names:  Guar flour;  gum cyamopsis;  cyamopsis gum;  Burtonite V-7-E Trademarks:  Decorpa (Norgine);  Guarina (Norgine);  Glucotard (Boehringer, Mann.);  Guarem (Shire) Literature References:  Mol wt about 220,000.  The ground endosperms of Cyamopsis tetragonolobus (L.) Taub., Leguminosae which is cultivated in India as livestock feed.  The water soluble fraction (85%) of guar flour is called guaran which consists of linear chains of (1®4)-b-D-mannopyranosyl units with a-D-galactopyranosyl units attached by (1®6) linkages.  Ratio of D-galactose to D-mannose is 1:2.  Effect on lipid metabolism:  D. J. A. Jenkins et al., Br. Med. J. 2, 1555 (1979); on glucose and lipid levels in diabetic and healthy volunteers:  U. Smith, G. Holm, Atherosclerosis (Shannon, Ire.) 45, 1 (1982); on renal tumors in diabetic rats:  B. C. Chin et al., Biomed. Res. 5, 273 (1984).  As source of fiber in patients with non-insulin dependent diabetes:  M. E. McIvor et al., Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 41, 891 (1985).  Toxicology studies:  S. L. Graham et al., Food Cosmet. Toxicol. 19, 287 (1981).  Comprehensive monograph:  F. Smith, R. Montgomery, The Chemistry of Plant Gums and Mucilages (Reinhold, New York, 1959) 627 pp.  Review:  Goldstein et al. in Industrial Gums, R. L. Whistler, Ed. (Academic Press, New York, 2nd ed., 1973) p 303-321.  Comprehensive description:  K. Yu et al., Anal. Profiles Drug Subs. Excip. 24, 243-276 (1996). Properties:  White to yellowish white, nearly odorless, free flowing powder.  Dispersible in hot or cold water, forming a colloidal solution.  Slightly sol in water but not in organic solvents.  Water solns are tasteless, odorless, nontoxic, of a pale, translucent gray color, and neutral.  Stable to heat.  Has five to eight times the thickening power of starch.  Water solns may be converted to a gel by small amounts of borax.  Aq dispersions are neutral.  Cf. "A Comparative Study of Commercially Available Guar Gums" by I. A. Schlakman, A. J. Bartilucci, Drug Stand. 25, 149-154 (1957).  LD50 in male, female rats (g/kg):  7.35, 6.77 orally (Graham). Toxicity data:  LD50 in male, female rats (g/kg):  7.35, 6.77 orally (Graham) Use:  In paper sizing; as a protective colloid, stabilizer, thickening and film forming agent for cheese, salad dressings, ice cream, soups; as a binding and disintegrating agent in tablet formulations; in pharmaceutical jelly formulations; in suspensions, emulsions, lotions, creams, toothpastes; in the mining industry as a flocculant, as a filtering agent; in water treatment as a coagulant aid. Therap-Cat:  Adjunct to diet, insulin or oral hypoglycemics in control of diabetes.  |