I am hoping someone might know a bit more about this than I do.
WHY when so many need a inexpensive iron chelator has noone pushed the use of the highly available natural sugar .. maltol .. ?
It has been shown to be safer than deferoxamine? 
"Maltol a sugar used as a common food additive"  
Comparative study of iron mobilization from haemosiderin, ferritin 
and iron(III) precipitates by chelators. 
Kontoghiorghes GJ, Chambers S, Hoffbrand AV. 
The heteroaromatic chelators 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one, 
MALTOL , mimosine and 2,4-dihydroxypyridine-N-oxide, have been shown 
to 
mobilize iron from human spleen haemosiderin, ferritin and also from 
iron(III) precipitates, all containing equal amounts of iron, at 
physiological pH. 
In the case of almost every chelator, the least-solubilized 
polynuclear iron form was ferritin, whereas haemosiderin was more 
soluble and the iron(III) precipitate the most soluble of all. 
Most of the chelators were more efficient than desferrioxamine at 
releasing iron from ferritin, but less efficient in the removal of 
iron from the other two polynuclear iron forms. 
It is suggested that the chelator differences in iron mobilization 
may be related to variations in the chelator molecular structure, the 
protein structure, iron forms and in the mechanism of iron release. 
PMID: 3566714 
----------------------- 
"Chelators of synthetic or plant origin may carry less risk"  
The effect of synthetic iron chelators on bacterial growth in human 
serum 
J.H. Brock a , Joan Licéaga a G.J. Kontoghiorghes b 
a University Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, Western 
Infirmary, Glasgow, USA b Department of Haematology, Royal Free 
Hospital, London, U.K. 
Correspondence to: Dr. J.H. Brock, Dept. of Bacteriology and 
Immunology, Western Ifirmary, Glasgow, G11 6NT, Scotland, U.K. 
ABSTRACT 
Abstract The effect of synthetic iron chelators of the 1-alkyl-3- 
hydroxy-2-methylpyrid-4-one class (the L1 series) and 1- 
hydroxypyrid-2- one (L4) on bacterial growth in human serum was 
compared with those of the plant iron chelators mimosine and maltol 
and of the microbial siderophore desferrioxamine. 
None of the synthetic chelators enhanced growth of 3 Gram-negative 
organisms (Yersinia enterocolitica, Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas 
aeruginosa); in some cases they were even inhibitory. L4 strongly 
stimulated growth of Staphylococcus epidermidis, but the L1 series 
had only a marginal effect. 
Maltol was mildly inhibitory to all 4 bacterial species, while 
mimosine enhanced the growth of S. epidermidis and Y. enterocolitica 
but had little effect on E. coli or P. aeruginosa. 
Desferrioxamine enhanced the growth. 
Chelators of synthetic or plant origin may carry less risk of 
increasing susceptibility to bacterial infection in patients 
undergoing chelation therapy for iron overload than does 
desferrioxamine, the drug currently in clinical use. 
Copyright 1988 Federation of European Microbiological Societies 
KEYWORDS 
Iron * Chelator * Bacterial growth * Infection 
FEMS Microbiology Letters 
Volume 47 Issue 1, Pages 55 - 60 
Published Online: 27 Mar 2006 
by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved 
Received 23 September 1987, Accepted 4 November 1987 
DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI) 
10.1111/j.1574-6968.1988.tb02490.x About DOI 
--------------------------- 
http://www.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/184/1/131.pdf The formation of maltol upon heating certain aqueous 
carbohydrate glycine systems has been investigated. 
Carbohydrates used in the experiment included starch, 
cellulose, sucrose, lactose, maltose, glucose, galactose, 
and methyl a-n-glucopyranoside. 
Of these, maltol was obtained from only lactose and maltose. 
-------------------------- 
The Concise Encyclopedia of Foods & Nutrition 
Formation and Occurence of Maltol 
Chemists have demonstrated that maltol may be formed by heating 
maltose at 375 degrees F for 1 hour ( note the similaritiies of these 
conditions to those in baking), or by heating mixtures of sugars , 
such as maltose and lactose with amino acids , such as glycine (the 
latter procedure is known as nonenzymatic browning reaction of the 
Maillard type). 
Maltol is found in roasted materials which have a moderate to high 
carbohydrate content, such as bread crusts, cocoa beans , cellulose , 
cereals , chicory , coffee beans , diastatic flour doughs ( where 
some 
of the starch has been convertd by enzyme action to maltose), malt 
products, soft woods , and soybeans. 
It is also found in heated products which contain moderate amounts of 
both sugars and amino acids, such as condensed and dried milks, dried 
whey , and soy sauce. 
Apparently heating is not always required for the production of 
maltol, since it also occurs in larch bark and the dry needles of 
cone- bearing evergreen trees.