ino·si·tol /ɪˈnosəˌtɔl, aɪˈno, ˌtol/
纖維醇,纖維糖,肌糖
ino·si·tol /ɪnˈosəˌtɔl, aɪˈno, ˌtol/ 名詞
i·no·si·tol n. Physiol. Chem. A white crystalline substance (C6H12O6) with a sweet taste, widely distributed in certain animal tissues and fluids, particularly in the muscles of the heart and lungs, and also in some plants, as in unripe pease, beans, potato sprouts, etc. Although isomeric with dextrose, it has no carbonyl (aldehyde or ketone) group, and is therefore not a carbohydrate, but a derivative of cyclohexane. Called also inosite, cyclohexitol, cyclohexanehexol, hexahydroxycyclohexane and phaseomannite. There are nine possible steroisomers, not all of which are found naturally. The predominate natural form is cis-1,2,3,5-trans-4,6-cyclohexanehexol, also called myo-inositol. The naturally occurring phytic acid in plants is the hexaphosphate of inositol, from which inositol may be manufactured; phytin is the calcium-magnesium salt of phytic acid. It is also a component of phosphatidylinositol. --MI11
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inositol
n : an optically inactive alcohol that is a component of the
vitamin B complex