Tampilkan postingan dengan label alkalosis. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label alkalosis. Tampilkan semua postingan

Jumat, 01 Januari 2016

Alkaline Diet - 4-9 Days Suffice to Boost Urinary pH, Boost Time to Exhaustion (21%) + Fat Oxid. During Exercise (10%)

Many of you may now shake their heads and say: Well I am already eating such a diet... even though, I didn't do it for its alkalizing effects. Good for you!
As a SuppVersity reader you're familiar with the multifaceted benefits of sodium bicarbonate. Evidence that it will improve your performance, even when taken chronically, however, is still lacking. With a recently published study by Susan L. Caciano and colleagues we do yet have more evidence that this could be the case even though, we're not talking about bicarbonate supplementation, technically: In her study, Caciano tried to experimentally confirm the previous cross-sectional findings (Niekamp. 2012) suggesting that even a short term (4-9 days) low-PRAL, i.e. highly alkaline diet, would result in a higher respiratory exchange ratio during maximal exercise as compared to the SAD acidic diet.
You can learn more about bicarbonate and pH-buffers at the SuppVersity

The Hazards of Acidosis

Build Bigger Legs W/ Bicarbonate

HIIT it Hard W/ NaCHO3

Creatine + BA = Perfect Match

Bicarb Buffers Creatine

Instant 14% HIIT Boost
Now, this may initially sound like a disadvantage, but in view of the fact that the study showed that the exact opposite was the case and the alkaline diet reduced the ratio of glucose to fat Caciano's 18-60 year-old, healthy volunteers, who had been randomly assigned in a cross-over design (meaning all subjects performed the tests once on both diets) to a high or low PRAL diet, burned during...
  • You will probably remember that Serial loading helps avoid the gastro-intestinal side effects from consuming large amounts of sodium bicarbonate in one sitting. Eventually, however, it is a special way to alkalize your diet aggressively.
    [...] a graded exercise test that was initiated at a speed determined during warm-up to increase HR to ~70% of age-predicted maximal heart rate (HRmax) and a grade of 0% and then increased by 2 percentage points every 2 minutes until the subject could no longer continue due to fatigue, and 
  • [...] an anaerobic exercise performance during which they had had to run to exhaustion on a treadmill with the speed set at the same speed used during the graded exercise test, albeit at a treadmill grade that was 2 percentage points steeper than that achieved during the last full stage of the graded exercise test
For each of the dietary interventions, the study dietitian provided the subjects with specific instructions on how to modify their habitual diets to achieve a low- or high PRAL diet.
Ketogenic diets, acidic and problematic? The standard versions of low-carb or ketogenic diets have been shown to trigger significant decreases in blood pH (Yancy. 2007), of which the study at hand shows that they could trigger relevant performance decreases. Since eating more fruit is not an option, though, your vegetable intake should be as high as possible. On the other hand, the standard Western Diet will have similar consequences and the effects observed in the study at hand, as well as in previous studies could be corollary to the alkalinity of the diet and in fact caused by a mere increase in polyphenols, vitamins, dietary nitrate and other potentially performance enhancing substances in fruits and vegetables.
The study dietitian was in contact with the participants (via telephone or email) every day during the dietary interventions to encourage compliance and to provide specific food suggestions as needed.
  • The general strategy used for the low-PRAL diet was to increase the consumption of alkaline-promoting foods such as fruits and vegetables and to reduce the consumption of acid promoting foods such as meats, cheeses, and grains. More specifically, participants were instructed to consume 6-8 cups of vegetables and >4 servings of fruit each day. Because there is a tendency for lower energy intake with diets that are rich in fruits and vegetables, such as the low-PRAL diet, participants were instructed to eat frequently and consume energy dense foods during the low-PRAL trial, such as starchy vegetables (e.g. sweet potatoes), dried fruits (e.g. dates and raisins), and plant sources of fat (e.g. avocado, coconut, nuts, seeds). Foods with moderate PRAL values (e.g. legumes, yogurt, egg whites, quinoa) were allowed and were used to ensure that energy and macronutrient intakes were adequate. The participants were also advised to minimize the consumption of all meats, cheeses and common grains (most of which are high-PRAL) during the low-PRAL diet. 
  • Bicarbonate keeps muscle activity high - even during most intense workouts | more
    During the high-PRAL diet, participants were instructed to consume at least 3-4 servings of common grains (e.g. wheat, corn, and oats), 3 servings of meat, and 3 servings of cheese (especially hard cheeses such as parmesan) each day while minimizing the intakes of fruits and vegetables. Moderate PRAL foods were allowed as desired as long as it did not displace high PRAL foods from the diet. In general, the high-PRAL diet required less intensive counseling from the dietitian be cause it closely resembled the baseline diet of the participants.
Now, obviously even the most tightly controlled study will have confounding effects that may mess with the results. For the time being, however, we will simply assume that the only thing the diets did (and were intended to do) was to achieve a dietary PRAL of ≤-1 mEq/d during the low- and a PRAL ≥15 mEq/d during the high-PRAL diet phases (I will get back to the validity of this assumption in the bottom line). As the scientists point out, "these cut points were based on PRAL values of the high and low PRAL tertiles that were observed in our previous cross-sectional study on 57 middle-aged men and women (Niekamp et al., 2012)" (Caciano). Whether the subjects achieved the desired level of alkalinity was measure with pH stripes in their morning urine.
Figure 1: Fasted morning urine pH during the dietary intervention for the low- and high-PRAL interventions. The objective was to attain the pH goal in 4 days; however, up to 9 days were required for some participants. “Last day” indicates urine pH on the last day of the dietary intervention (i.e. 4 to 9 days), which was also the morning during which outcomes assessments were performed (Caciano. 2015); values are means, error bars are standard deviations.
As the data in Figure 1 tells you, the dietary intervention successfully changed the urinary pH levels of which most critics of the idea of an "alkaline diet" say that it was as irrelevant as the PRAL-value, i.e. the degree of alkalinity of acidity of your diet, itself.
Figure 2: Respiratory exchange ratio (RER | high = higher CHO/FAT oxidation) and performance time-to-exhaustion on the graded (left) and anaerobic (right) performance tests (Caciano. 2015).
If this assumption is correct, the significant increase in RER (=increase in fat oxidation during the graded performance test), as well as the borderline significant and significant performance increases on the graded and anaerobic performance (+21%) test in Figure 2 would have to be explained by ergogenic effects of certain polyphenols, vitamins or other ingredients of fruits and veggies. This is possible, but just as hypothetical as the assumption that the changes were observed in response to a dietary-induced increase in serum bicarbonate.
What about the conflict w/ previous observational data? Neither I nor the scientists have an explanation for the difference to the previously cited observational data by Niekamp et al who had found increased RER-values in individuals consuming a lower PRAL diet. One possibility is that the low PRAL diet was also lower in carbohydrates and thus triggered a decrease in RER. Another possibility the scientists plan to test in a future study is "that the shift in systemic pH altered the activity of enzymes that regulate lipid and carbohydrate oxidation [due to the pH-sensitivity] of carnitine acyl transferase-I, one of the rate limiting enzymes in lipid oxidation" (Caciano. 2015).
High Dietary Acid Load Doubles Risk of Type II Diabetes in Lean Individuals! Causative or Corollary? Plus: Are Grains, not Meats the Main Offenders in the Modern Diet? Learn more about the benefits of alkaline diets in this SV Classic!
Unlike the mere ingestion of increased amounts of fruits and veggies, the levels of bicarbonate in the blood has yet previously been shown to will trigger improvements in time-to-exhaustion from numerous studies on sodium bicarbonate. That the latter was in fact increased, even though the scientists measured only the urinary pH, which increased by by ~12%, can be assumed based on previous studies by Unwin and Capasso (2001); studies that confirm that the urinary pH is a reliable indicator of serum bicarbonate. Accordingly, Caciano et al.'s explanation that, both the performance increases and the borderline significant increase in VO2max (p = 0.08 | not shown in Figure 2) "could have resulted from an alkaline environment created by the consumption of low PRAL foods, and possibly by an increase in bicarbonate availability" (Caciano. 2015) is reasonable.

Plus, the authors are also right to point out that it is "generally accepted that bicarbonate loading improves anaerobic exercise performance by enhancing acid buffering capacity," and that it would be pretty awesome, if the same or at least similar benefits could be achieved without risking gastrointestinal distress, as it has been repeatedly observed in response to bicarbonate loading, high intakes of fruits and vegetables, which have the added benefits of being rich in phyto-chemicals, fiber, antioxidants, and other nutrients. Overall, the planned consumed of an alkalizing diet may thus, just like Caciano et al. say, "be an attractive alternative to bicarbonate loading for improving anaerobic exercise performance" (Caciano. 2015). It that's due to or rather corollary to its "alkalizing" effects, is yet open to debate...
For 66% of all athletes, sodium bicar-bonate will work; others get diarrhea.
Bottom line: I guess, the performance benefits of the low-PRAL diet are about as undebatable as the beneficial health effects of increased intakes of fruits and vegetables. Practically speaking, we do thus not really need to know why the performance of the subjects increased significantly on the low-PRAL diet. What is important, though, is that the performance did increase statistically significant and to an extent that is practically relevant for every athlete who performs in competitions that require one or several 1-5 minute bouts of high intensity exercise... what? Yeah, that's probably more than 50% of all athletes.

Addendum: For those who have been indoctrinated by self-proclaimed mythbusters and avengers of "the truth" or quacks who claim to be able to heal every ailment with certain dietary tweaks against or in favor of the benefits of "alkaline diets" here's an interesting overview (Schwalfenberg. 2011) of proven and unproven claims of what an "alkaline diet" may be good for | Comment!
References:
  • Caciano, Susan L., et al. "Effects of Dietary Acid Load on Exercise Metabolism and Anaerobic Exercise Performance." Journal of sports science & medicine 14.2 (2015): 364.
  • Niekamp, Katherine, et al. "Systemic acid load from the diet affects maximal exercise respiratory exchange ratio." Medicine and science in sports and exercise 44.4 (2012): 709.
  • Schwalfenberg, Gerry K. "The alkaline diet: is there evidence that an alkaline pH diet benefits health?." Journal of Environmental and Public Health 2012 (2011).

Rabu, 21 Oktober 2015

Low Grade Metabolic Acidosis May Eat Away Your Bones and Blow Up Your Belly Via Empowering Glucocorticoids!

The way we eat and live is not just obesogenic it is also acidogenic... or is the former just a consequence of the latter? 
I've written about the nasty effects of low grade metabolic acidosis which include calcium loss and brittle bones, nitrogen / protein loss and decreased protein synthesis, impaired growth hormone and IGF-1 production and more in a 2013 SuppVersity Science Round-Up (read it).

For you, as a SuppVersity veteran who's read this and related articles, it should thus not be surprising that scientists from the German Aerospace Center in Cologne were now able to establish a new, mechanistic link between the "long-term ingestion of habitually acidifying western diets may constitute an independent risk factor for bone degradation and cardiometabolic diseases" (Buehlmeier. 2015).

As Judith Buehlmeier and her colleagues point out, we have long been aware of the ill effects of low-grade metabolic acidosis (LGMA), as induced by high dietary acid load or sodium chloride (NaCl) intake and a lack of alkaline foods and nutrients in the average Western diet. What has hitherto not been fully elucidated is the underlying mechanisms, which is not as simple as the dissolving tooth in a glass of coke would suggest.
You can learn more about bicarbonate and pH-buffers at the SuppVersity

The Hazards of Acidosis

Build Bigger Legs W/ Bicarbonate

HIIT it Hard W/ NaCHO3

Creatine + BA = Perfect Match

Bicarb Buffers Creatine

Alkalosis Boosts Muscle Activity
In their latest study, the researchers from the German Aerospace Center in Cologne and their colleagues from the Universities of Bonn and Heidelberg do now present the first convincing evidence that the previously cited catabolic / anti-anabolic effects of chronic low-grade acidosis (LGMA) are triggered by interactions of the acid–base balance with the metabolism of glucocorticoids (GC). In said, study, the researchers "aimed to investigate GC activity/metabolism under alkaline supplementation and NaCl-induced LGMA" in eight young, healthy, normal-weight men who participated in two crossover designed interventional studies.
Figure 1: Correcting a diet-induced low grade metabolic acidosis with K-bicarbonate reduces the nitrogen loss of 750mg - 1000mg per day (per 60kg BW) in post- menopausal women in a prev. study (Frassetto. 1997)
  • In Study A, two 10-day high NaCl diet (32 g/d) periods were conducted, one supplemented with 90 mmol KHCO3/day.
     
  • In Study B, participants received a high and a low NaCl diet (31 vs. 3 g/day), each for 14 days. During low NaCl, the diet was moderately acidified by replacement of a bicarbonate-rich mineral water (consumed during high NaCl) with a non-alkalizing drinking water. 
In repeatedly collected 24-h urine samples, potentially bioactive GCs (urinary-free cortisol / free cortisone), as well as tetrahydrocortisol (THF), 5a-THF, and tetrahydrocortisone (THE), were analyzed.
Even Low Grade Acidosis Will Increase Your Diabetes Risk | learn more!
Beware! It does not take much to mess you up! A quantitative analysis of the data from the study at hand shows that even increases of dietary acid loads in the magnitude of only 30 mEq/d, which drive the renal net acid excretion into a range that is commonly seen in people on the standard Western diet (60–70 mEq/d), suffice to affect glucocorticoid activity in ways that may ruin your bone, heart and muscle health. In that, the main offenders are grains, not meats. Grains contribute an estimated 38% to the net acid load of the avg. Westerner (Sebastian. 2002).
A brief glimpse at the glucocorticoid levels in the urine of the subjects (see Figure 2) shows that with supplementation of 90 mmol KHCO3, the marker of total adrenal GC secretion dropped (p = 0.047) and potentially bioactive-free GCs were reduced (p = 0.003).
Figure 2: aily adrenal cortisol secretion as indexed by the sum of excretion rates of the 3 major urinary glucocorticoid (GC) metabolites tetrahydrocortisol, 5a-tetrahydrocortisol, and tetrahydrocortisone (THF + aTHF + THE) as well as excretions of potentially bioactive-free GCs (UFF + UFE | Buehlmeier. 2015)
This is particularly interesting if we also take into account that in Study B, the GC secretion and potentially bioactivefree GCs did not exhibit the expected fall with NaCl-reduction as net acid excretion was raised by 30 mEq/d. In conjunction study A + B do thus underline the important role of alkalizing agents like bicarbonate or potassium - irrespective of the total intake of NaCl, of which the study at hand confirms that it is part of the problem. Its ill effects, however, appear to be mediated mainly, if not exclusively, via the acidifying effects of chloride.
Bottom line: As the authors point out, their study is the first to provide convincing evidence that the ill effects of chronic low-grade metabolic acidosis are mediated via enhanced glucocorticoid activity and secretion. In that, the pro-acidic effects of NaCl, as well as the lack of alkalizing foods and nutrients in the Western diet are the main motors of dietary induced glucocorticoid elevations.

Inactivity amplifies the ill effect of glucocorticoids on muscle loss by up to 213% (Ferrando. 1999).
These elevations are - in spite of being still in the physiological range - significant enough to compromise bone quality (Bedford. 2010; Shi. 2015), cardiometabolic health & diabetes (Prodam. 2013; Qi, 2007), and protein turnover (Frassetto. 1997 | see Figure 1; Buehlmeier. 2012), and appear to be particularly unfavorable under conditions of physical inactivity (Ferrando. 1999 | see Figure on the right). Reason enough for the authors to conclude that "[a]ccordingly, higher dietary acid loads may, in the long run, constitute an independent GC-driven musculoskeletal and cardiometabolic risk factor related with western dietary habits" (Buehlmeier. 2015) | Comment!
References:
  • Bedford, Jennifer L., and Susan I. Barr. "The relationship between 24-h urinary cortisol and bone in healthy young women." International journal of behavioral medicine 17.3 (2010): 207-215.
  • Buehlmeier, Judith, et al. "Alkaline salts to counteract bone resorption and protein wasting induced by high salt intake: results of a randomized controlled trial." The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 97.12 (2012): 4789-4797.
  • Ferrando, Arny A., et al. "Inactivity Amplifies the Catabolic Response of Skeletal Muscle to Cortisol 1." The Journal Of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 84.10 (1999): 3515-3521.
  • Frassetto, L., R. Curtis Morris Jr, and A. Sebastian. "Potassium bicarbonate reduces urinary nitrogen excretion in postmenopausal women." The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 82.1 (1997): 254-259.
  • Qi, Dake, and Brian Rodrigues. "Glucocorticoids produce whole body insulin resistance with changes in cardiac metabolism." American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism 292.3 (2007): E654-E667.
  • Prodam, Flavia, et al. "High-end normal adrenocorticotropic hormone and cortisol levels are associated with specific cardiovascular risk factors in pediatric obesity: a cross-sectional study." BMC medicine 11.1 (2013): 44.
  • Sebastian, Anthony, et al. "Estimation of the net acid load of the diet of ancestral preagricultural Homo sapiens and their hominid ancestors." The American journal of clinical nutrition 76.6 (2002): 1308-1316.
  • Shi, Lijie, et al. "Higher glucocorticoid secretion in the physiological range is associated with lower bone strength at the proximal radius in healthy children: importance of protein intake adjustment." Journal of Bone and Mineral Research 30.2 (2015): 240-248.