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RHR: Dispelling the Acid-Alkaline Myth

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What are the three basic claims of the acid-alkaline hypothesis? I'll clear up the confusion about what it all means for your health.

Revolution Health Radio podcast, Chris Kresser

The basic idea of the acid-alkaline hypothesis is that if we eat acid-forming foods, we get sick, and if we eat alkaline-forming foods, we’ll be healthy and we’ll be protected against disease. There are three claims of the acid-alkaline hypothesis. One is that diet affects the pH of our blood.  In other words, how acid-forming or alkaline-forming the foods are that we eat directly affects the pH or acidity of our blood. Number two would be that our urine pH is an accurate indicator of our health, and by extension, we can use these urine test strips that proponents of the hypothesis recommend and determine, first of all, whether our blood is acidic by measuring our urine acidity, and second of all, by extension, we can use these urine test strips to determine our health. And then the third claim would be that acid-forming diets contribute to modern disease.

In this episode, we cover:

5:15  What Chris ate today
9:10  What is the alkaline hypothesis?
10:32  Critique of the alkaline hypothesis

Links We Discuss

Steve Wright: Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening. You are listening to the Revolution Health Radio Show. I’m your host, Steve Wright, co-author at SCDlifestyle.com. This episode of RHR is brought to you by 14Four.me. Now, what is 14Four.me? Well, it’s a good question you asked. It’s Chris Kresser’s 14-day healthy lifestyle reset program. If you’re someone who has been listening to this show and you’re still trying to put together all the pieces of great health, maybe you’re still struggling with low energy, a little extra weight right now, digestive issues, acne, or anything like that, you know that Chris talks about the foundation of all health starts with four areas: diet, sleep, movement, and stress. These things can be very hard to create in your life. If you’ve ever tried to create multiple healthy habits at once, they are difficult, and what the 14Four program is, is a step-by-step way to integrate them all at one time. Whether you’ve fallen off the wagon or you want to get on the wagon for the first time, I’d really encourage you to check out 14Four.me and give it a try.

Now, with me is integrative medical practitioner, healthy skeptic, and New York Times bestselling author, Chris Kresser. Chris, how’s the day going?

Chris Kresser: The day is going great. How are you, Steve?

Steve Wright: Chris, my new word is conflicted.

Chris Kresser: OK, right. Good. You’re moving away from the fine and great and good. I remember now.

Steve Wright: Yeah.

Chris Kresser: All right, you’re conflicted.

Steve Wright: Yeah, it’s 83 outside and we’re inside.

Chris Kresser: Yeah, it’s beautiful here, too. Well, you know, we’re doing this for the benefit of all humankind, so that should be some consolation. Maybe that’s the conflict you’re experiencing.

Steve Wright: Yes, yes. No, I am willingly choosing to be here and do this now.

Chris Kresser: All right.

Steve Wright: But I just wanted to be honest.

Chris Kresser: Good. Well, from what I learned talking to you before this, you’re headed to a music festival this weekend, and I’m headed up to Tahoe with Robb Wolf and Dan Pardi and family, so I guess we can’t complain too much.

Steve Wright: Nope. I think we’ve set up the conditions to be working inside and unplug this weekend.

Chris Kresser: Good. All right.

Steve Wright: So before we get into today’s question, Chris, people are literally dying to know, what have you been eating today?

What Chris Ate Today

Chris Kresser: Well, let’s see. I had some chorizo. We recently bought half a pig from a local rancher, a pastured, acorn-fed pig, and so we have some chorizo from that, which is really delicious. And some plantains fried in some coconut oil and raw sauerkraut, so pretty standard. And I have not eaten lunch. I’ve decided to skip lunch today, so it’s 1:30 when we’re doing this show, and I’ll probably just go through to dinner because I have a lot of stuff going on. That’s my version of intermittent fasting, as we talked about a few shows ago.

Steve Wright: OK, perfect. Well, before we get into the question, I just want to let all the listeners know that this podcast is really created by you and for you. If you’d like your question answered on the show, please go to ChrisKresser.com/PodcastQuestion and submit it there.

So, Chris, what’s the question for today?

Chris Kresser: We have a great question from Melissa, and this is something that comes up a lot, so I’m looking forward to answering. Let’s give it a listen.

Question from Melissa: Hi, Chris. This is Melissa Milam. I am in school right now to become a nutrition therapist, and I run across some conflicting information sometimes, and today I ran across the relationship between protein and calcium metabolism. My textbook states that high dietary protein intakes are known to increase urinary calcium excretion, and some research suggests that animal protein is more detrimental to calcium metabolism, so I just wanted to hear your thoughts on this and see what research you have to offer. Thanks a lot!

Chris Kresser: OK, so what Melissa is really referring to here is the whole acid-alkaline theory, and I’ve actually written a couple of critiques of this hypothesis on my blog a couple of years ago. We’ll put those in the show notes. I’ve also spoken about it, delivered public presentations on this topic recently in two different venues. One was at the Weston Price Wise Traditions Conference a couple of years ago, and the other was just very recently at Paleo f(x) in 2015 in Austin here. But if you didn’t have a chance to go to those conferences and you haven’t read the blog articles, this should at least help clarify this particular part of the hypothesis and Melissa’s question, of course, specifically, and then if you need more background and want to dive a little bit more deeply into this topic — which I recommend; it’s pretty interesting, and there are a lot of misconceptions and misunderstandings out there about it — then you can check out those articles on the podcast or I think you can purchase a recording of both the Wise Traditions presentation and the Paleo f(x) presentation. The Paleo f(x) one is a little bit more recent and had some updated info, so maybe if you had to choose, that would be the best one.

Steve Wright: So, Chris, are you telling me that the acid-alkaline theory, hypothesis, myth — whatever we decide it is today or whatever you tell me it is today — that’s in the medical textbooks and is being taught?

What Is the Alkaline Hypothesis?

Chris Kresser: That’s a good question. There’s part of it that’s in medical textbooks and part of it that’s not, so maybe we should do a little background. The overall acid-alkaline hypothesis, the basic idea is that if we eat acid-forming foods, we get sick, and if we eat alkaline-forming foods, we’ll be healthy and we’ll be protected against disease, and there are three basic claims of the hypothesis. One is that diet affects the pH of our blood. In other words, how acid-forming or alkaline-forming the foods are that we eat directly affects the pH or acidity of our blood. Number two would be that our urine pH is an accurate indicator of our health, and by extension, we can use these urine test strips that proponents of the hypothesis recommend and determine, first of all, whether our blood is acidic by measuring our urine acidity, and second of all, by extension, we can use these urine test strips to determine our health. And then the third claim would be that acid-forming diets contribute to modern disease. Melissa’s question is specifically about third claim, and that’s what we’re going to spend most of the time talking about.

In terms of what’s in medical textbooks and medical studies, you will not find any reliable medical studies or textbooks that claim that what we eat affects the pH of our blood because the pH range of our blood is so tightly controlled by our body that it’s not possible to alter it just by what we eat, and the reason for this is that even slight changes in the pH or acidity of our blood can lead to very, very serious consequences, including death. So it doesn’t make sense from an evolutionary perspective that we would be able to dramatically lower or raise our pH just by what we eat or we could easily kill ourselves off, and that’s not really what evolution is all about. So that first claim is pretty easily dismissed, and the second claim, which is that urine pH is an accurate indicator of health or that our urine pH is a good reflection of our serum pH, you will actually find some studies that make that claim, but they’re also easily dismissed, and there are many more studies that have found that the pH of our urine does not in any way reflect the pH of our blood and, therefore, it’s not a reliable indicator of anything other than how well our kidneys are functioning because one of their main jobs is to buffer the blood and remove any excess acid that might accumulate from protein digestion.

So the first two claims are pretty easily dismissed, and there’s not even very much debate about them in the scientific literature. The third claim, however, is addressed at length in the scientific literature, and if you just do a cursory search, you can find studies that support this idea that consuming acid-forming foods will lead to excess calcium excretion in the urine, and it’s easy to come to the conclusion that acid-forming foods — which would be animal products, among other things — are negative for bone health because of that.

Steve Wright: Before you dive into this third area, really quick, just to summarize, number one, blood pH is way too tightly regulating. That’s a total myth that food affects that.

Chris Kresser: Yeah.

Steve Wright: Number two, the pH of our urine is not related to the pH of our blood. However, the pH of our urine, for those people who have maybe been testing this, it does indicate potential kidney function.

Chris Kresser: Well, it measures how much acid you’re excreting in the urine, specifically, and yeah, that can indicate kidney function, but it’s not necessarily pathology. One of the kidney’s normal jobs is to filter excess acid from the blood, and when it does that, of course, it then is eliminated through the urine. And there’s a whole sustainable process there, where when protein is digested, acids are buffered by these bicarbonate ions that are made by the kidneys, and that reaction produces carbon dioxide, which is an acid, and the carbon dioxide is exhaled by the lungs, which is, by the way, the biggest source of acid elimination in the body by far, that exhalation of carbon dioxide, and it happens very quickly. And then that reaction where the kidneys buffer bicarbonate ions also produces salts, which are then excreted by the kidneys, and during the excretion of those salts, the kidney makes new bicarbonate ions that replace what was used up in the buffering of the acid, and that just produces this ongoing sustainable cycle that’s not adverse for bone health in any way.

We’re starting to kind of jump into the critique, but let me first tell you a little bit more about the hypothesis because, otherwise, the critique won’t make sense. The hypothesis — and, by the way, this is a specific kind of subset of the acid-alkaline hypothesis, which is called the acid-ash theory of osteoporosis, and the basic idea is not as simple and wrong as, you know, eating acid-forming foods raises acid in our blood and that affects our bone health. As we’ve established, that’s not really accepted at all in the scientific literature. This is a little bit more nuanced, and the idea is that when you consume acid-forming foods, it doesn’t change the pH of the blood directly, but the body pulls minerals out of the bone in order to maintain a stable blood pH. So if you continually are eating net acid-forming diets with animal products, then you eventually will pull enough calcium out of your bones that you’ll start experiencing bone demineralization and osteoporosis.

Critique of the Alkaline Hypothesis

That’s the theory, and that’s what Melissa’s nutrition instructors were alluding to. And like I said, if you just do a quick search of the literature, you will find studies that show that eating acid-forming foods does lead to higher calcium levels in the urine, and researchers initially assumed that these higher calcium levels were coming from bone, it was being withdrawn from the bone, as I just said the theory states. The problem is that assumption turned out to be wrong. There was a big meta-analysis in 2009 of five high-quality studies, and they did find a linear association between the amount of acid in the urine and the amount of calcium in the urine, but there was no association between the amount of acid in the urine and calcium levels in the body. So if you put it more simply, if you eat more protein, you will pee out more acid and calcium, but the amount of calcium in your body doesn’t change.

How is that possible? Well, other studies have shown that eating more animal protein actually increases calcium absorption, and this has been shown in human isotope trials where they tracked the progress of calcium through the body, and I have a slide — This is a podcast, so you can’t see this, but in the presentation, a show a slide. It’s a chart that shows as protein increases from 1 gram per kilogram of body weight to 2.1 grams per kilogram of body weight, you see a significant increase in the amount of calcium in the urine. Then they have another figure on the right that shows that as you increase protein by that same amount, there’s a corresponding increase in the amount of calcium that’s absorbed in the intestine into the bloodstream, and that increase in intestinal calcium absorption compensates for any loss of calcium that might happen in the urine, and the overall calcium balance either doesn’t change or it actually even goes up with higher-protein diets.

So as you can see, this is a misconception. Her professors or instructors are saying that high dietary protein increases urinary calcium excretion, and then they make the assumption that, therefore, it’s bad for bone health, but that’s only part of the puzzle, and they’re not understanding the increase in intestinal absorption of calcium that animal protein and protein in general leads to. Does that make sense?

Steve Wright: Oh, it totally makes sense, especially if you take a step back and look at, for instance, I don’t know, eating one cup of meat or one cup of vegetables and the amount of calcium that might be coming in that’s usable in each scenario.

Chris Kresser: Yeah.

Steve Wright: And then trusting that the body knows how to actually regulate its own nutrient stores.

Chris Kresser: Yeah. There are a lot of different ways to look at this, too. We just talked about the mechanistic view of how intestinal calcium absorption compensates for any potential loss in the urine, but there are a lot of other ways to look at it, too. For example, instead of looking at the effects of animal protein on an intermediate marker of bone health, like calcium, why not just look directly at studies that examine the relationship between animal protein intake and more specific markers of bone health, like bone mass or bone microarchitecture or bone strength? It’s the same kind of idea as, you know, instead of looking at the relationship between saturated fat intake and cholesterol, why not just look directly at saturated fat intake and heart disease? Because that’s why we would be looking at cholesterol in the first place, as a predictor for heart disease, right? But you can just look directly at studies that examine the relationship between saturated fat and heart disease, and you see that there isn’t much of a relationship.

Now, in the case of protein and bone health, if you look at these direct markers of bone health, there was, for example, a 2009 meta-analysis in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that looked at 61 different studies, and they found a strong positive association between protein intake and bone health. On the other hand, there have been controlled trials where they have experimentally induced protein deficiency — so they’ve dramatically restricted protein intake — and that has led to deterioration of bone mass, microarchitecture, and strength, which are the hallmarks of osteoporosis.

But we can go further. We can also say, what does the research tell us about the importance of protein for bone health? And if you do that kind of review, you will find that there are three potential mechanisms through which higher protein intake positively impacts bone health. Number one is that protein contains a bunch of amino acids that are really important for bone. Number two is that eating more protein increases IGF-1 levels, and IGF-1, in turn, increases bone growth and bone mass. And then number three, eating more protein lowers levels of serum parathyroid hormone, and we know that high levels of serum parathyroid hormone are associated with low bone mineral density, high bone turnover, and an increased risk of fractures.

Steve Wright: Well, I think that sums it up pretty well.

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Chris Kresser: I’m not done, though! We have to keep going! So animal protein, I think, is especially important for bone health. So far, we’ve just been talking about the relationship between protein and bone, but we have studies that have shown that changes in muscle and bone mass track together, so that tells us that things that are good for muscle are typically good for bone, and vice versa. And we know that leucine is an amino acid that signals that protein is available for muscle synthesis, and animal proteins typically contain high amounts of leucine, which, of course, then suggests that leucine may play an important role in bone health.

We have observational studies that show that a high intake of animal protein is associated with greater bone mineral density and decreased rates of hip fracture, especially in the elderly. On the other hand, we have studies that show that eating less meat and more plant protein leads to worse bone health. There’s a negative association between vegetable protein and bone mineral density in both sexes, and elderly women on vegetarian diets have been shown to have increased risk of osteoporosis.

And finally, we have the gold standard randomized clinical trials where protein has also been shown to benefit bone. For example, there’s a 2009 trial in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that found that in postmenopausal women, increasing protein from 10% of calories to 20% of calories improved intestinal calcium absorption and also decreased urinary DPD, which is a marker of bone breakdown, and an increased IGF-1, which, as we just talked about, has several different positive effects on bone health.

And then the last thing that I’m going to say is there was a really exhaustive review on this topic published in the Nutrition Journal in 2011 that looked at 55 different trials, 22 of them randomized clinical trials, and the authors’ conclusion was this: “A causal association between dietary acid load and osteoporotic bone disease is not supported by the evidence, and there is no evidence that an alkaline diet is protective of bone health.”

Booyah.

Steve Wright: Drop the mic! Point made. There are some fascinating things to take away from this discussion. One quote — and I’ll probably butcher it, so I’ll paraphrase it the best I can — I believe it was Einstein who said, if you give me 60 minutes to solve a problem, I’d spend 55 minutes figuring out the right questions to ask.

Chris Kresser: Yeah.

Steve Wright: And I have made this mistake over and over again. It seems like what happens is we are so quick to try to find the answer that we begin to look for surrogate endpoints that will help us with our biases or help us just make the problem easier. A surrogate endpoint, if you don’t know what that is, it’s — this is from Wikipedia — “a measure of effect of a specific treatment that may correlate with a real clinical endpoint but does not necessarily have a guaranteed relationship.” There’s a lot of surrogate endpoint research out there, and I believe that if you can think about the real endpoint, for instance, if we’re talking about osteoporosis in this case, if that’s the bullseye, you have sort of concentric rings coming out from that of surrogate endpoint data, and some this stuff, there are surrogate endpoints that are so far away from the bullseye that the relationships all break down. So I think one of the take-homes from this giant myth that’s been populated throughout the internet and throughout the world is about asking better questions and trying not to really force the answer too fast.

Chris Kresser: That’s a really great point, Steve. In a way, I mean, that’s largely what this community of explorers and investigators at ChrisKresser.com is all about, continuing to challenge even our cherished beliefs, like the idea that — not that this was a cherished belief for me, but sacred cows, let’s say, like the idea that legumes aren’t paleo and shouldn’t be eaten because they have toxins in them. We have to continually go deeper and challenge our beliefs and continue to ask questions. That’s really what the process of science is all about. Just accepting something at face value because you’ve heard it a few different times or even because a teacher or a professor says it is generally not the best way to acquire knowledge, so kudos to Melissa for asking that question and for getting some clarification. I definitely encourage Melissa and others who want to get more info on this topic to read the two articles, which have a bunch of citations, references that you can pursue if you want to learn more, or to watch the full presentation from Paleo f(x).

I think this is not a harmless theory. You know, some theories are wrong and they’re just relatively harmless, and some theories are wrong and they are definitely potentially harmful. I’ve written a lot about the potential for nutrient deficiencies on a vegetarian diet, and so I’m not going to rehash that here, but if you take an acid-alkaline diet through to its logical conclusion, you’ll end up on a vegetarian or even vegan diet. If you try to maximize the alkaline-forming quality of the diet, then you’ll pretty much be eschewing all animal proteins. And if you do that, you’re going to put yourself at higher risk for things like B12 deficiency, calcium deficiency, zinc deficiency, vitamin D deficiency, EPA and DHA deficiency, and all of the health problems that are associated with that. So it’s not just a benign misunderstanding; it’s a pretty significant one that could negatively impact the health of a lot of people.

Steve Wright: Yeah, I would agree with that 100%. I think it’s also a really great example of how this n=1 experimentation can really fail you. I know of a lot of actual friends, you know, who will try something like this — and I have nothing wrong with people trying things — but they’ll buy into a myth like this, they’ll make changes in their lifestyle that we would generally think are good, for instance, eating more vegetables, eating more fruits, and they may have underlying health conditions that make meat or animal consumption, such as low stomach acid or GI infections or anything, a little harder for them to digest right now. Otherwise, they wouldn’t be searching for better health anyway, and so they reduce their animal consumption, they increase vegetables and berries, they get some feedback from some pH strips, and lo and behold, they’re a changed person in seven days, and now they’re off and running in this direction for a long time. I totally encourage doing tests and things, but what I’m finding more and more is people are forgetting to ask the assumption questions, like, what is this based on? What am I basing my n=1 trials on? And I think this myth, in particular, can cause a lot of harm in people who run with an n=1 idea if they don’t challenge the assumptions behind their own bodies.

Chris Kresser: That’s another great point, Steve. Another example of that would be I just published an article today called “3 Reasons Gluten Intolerance May Be More Serious Than Celiac Disease,” and one of the commenters asked how reliable the tests are and whether you can rely exclusively on elimination provocation, and I think certainly elimination provocation is a very good idea if you don’t have access to this test, and for many years it’s been considered the gold standard for assessing non-celiac gluten sensitivity, but one of my concerns with it is we know there are “silent” forms of celiac disease where people don’t have obvious symptoms even when they eat gluten. The effect of gluten may be immune dysregulation that happens in the background. For example, maybe they start producing antibodies to pancreatic cells that produce insulin, or maybe they start making antibodies to thyroid. You can’t feel that, you know, until it’s already at the point where those organs are damaged and then you start to feel the decline in thyroid hormone production or the decline in insulin production via high blood sugar, and even that a lot of people don’t feel, and the only way they’re going to find out about it is if they get tested.

So my concern is, like, let’s say you have someone who does elimination provocation and they don’t notice any obvious problem with gluten, and then they get a test for gluten intolerance and it turns out that they’re reacting to it. What is the cost for that person of going on to continue to eat gluten? Unfortunately, it could be fairly high. And there’s no way of knowing, necessarily, in that n=1 experiment that it’s a problem. I think there are a lot of situations like this, and I’m glad you brought that up.

Steve Wright: Yeah, my pleasure. It’s taken me seven or eight years now to get to this point, so I think if we’re challenging some people’s beliefs today, and I think if you’re listening to this and feeling a little triggered by Chris and I are talking about right now, just know that we are supporting your changes in your health and we’re just giving you some sort of wisdom as guys who have done it to ourselves and been through long journeys ourselves and then also worked with a lot of people.

Chris Kresser: Yeah, and I would add that there’s a wide range of responses to a vegetarian diet. One of the things that determines how someone will respond is genetic polymorphisms that affect how well we convert inactive forms of nutrients to active forms of nutrients. To use an example, some people are really good at converting beta carotene, which is a vitamin A precursor that’s found in plant foods, into retinol, which is the active form of vitamin A that’s found in animal foods. So if that people goes on a vegetarian, alkaline-based diet, they might not fare as poorly as someone who is almost entirely unable to convert beta carotene into retinol, and there are people like that, actually a fairly substantial number of people. So the first person goes on a vegetarian diet. They do OK. The second person goes on a vegetarian diet, and they start to experience signs of vitamin A deficiency, which can cause a lot of problems very quickly. Again, there’s no one-size-fits-all approach. There’s a lot of different individual variation here that people aren’t even tracking and aren’t even aware of. Like, how would you possibly know that you’re the person that doesn’t convert beta carotene into vitamin A? Your doctor’s not going to test for that. I don’t even know if there are commercial tests for that available.

So there’s a lot to this, and I don’t want to create the impression that you can’t figure it out just by experimenting. I think that’s very important and crucial, but the point we’re trying to make here is there’s a role for continuing to ask questions and asking the right questions and getting help from someone who can guide you through the kinds of testing that can reveal things that aren’t easily determined just through self-experimentation.

Steve Wright: Yeah, that’s great. Well put, and I’m sure we could do a whole episode on the train we’re on right now, but I know you have some commitments today, and I have some other thoughts I’d share, but maybe for another time.

Chris Kresser: Yeah. If someone wants to ask that question, go for it. Maybe you can give them the link.

Steve Wright: All right. Well, thanks, everyone, for listening today. As we mentioned, ChrisKresser.com/PodcastQuestion to submit a question. Maybe you have some followups after this episode. We’d love to hear them.

In between episodes, if you’re not following Chris on social media, go to Facebook.com/ChrisKresserLAc and Twitter.com/ChrisKresser. Follow him there for more updates. Like, if you didn’t know he was going to Paleo f(x), he posted about that quite often on social media, so if you like those kinds of updates, make sure you’re following him on social media.

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58 Comments

Join the conversation

  1. Hmmm, Chris!! I personally don’t believe that there is any magic pixie dust when it comes to diet. If you love your food, your food will love you!! If you think something is bad for you, it probably is, and just don’t eat it! I truly believe that if we are calm, happy, and full of joy, out bodies (and bugs) will know what to do with what we eat. Of course, the food needs to be pure, wholesome food and that means organic and unprocessed. The Tibetan monks who have a begging bowl and eat one bowl of rice each day (if they are lucky) aren’t falling apart. Eating with gratitude and appreciation for the food that gives us life and connects us back to the source, contains all the energy we need to live as long as we don’t get in our own way and start analyzing every detail of what we put it our mouths.

  2. Chris, could you please tell what “increasing protein from 10% of calories to 20% of calories” means? I have been diagnosed with osteoporosis and I would like to know how many grams of protein they started eating?

    • I think he was talking about the the calories percentage breakdown of macro-nutrients. Carbohydrate and Protein is 4kcal/1g and Fat is 9kcal/1g. So in a 2000kcal diet, 10% of calories from protein =200kcal, divided by 4 (4kcal/g) =50g of protein. In this case 20% would be 400kcal from 100g of protein. So that’s an increase of 50g. You can use site like http://nutritiondata.self.com/ to see the nutrition profile of each food you’re eating, and site like https://cronometer.com/ to track how many calories you’re consuming daily, plus it also shows you the percentage breakdown.

  3. What about the affects of high protein on the mTor pathway ? Also, what about APO E people with 3/4? Aren’t high protein/ fat levels a concern with those genetics?

  4. Your emotions are your problem but the fact is that animal protein production in this country produces serious pollution and utilizes large quantities of water. There is also strong evidence that more whole plant-based foods in the diet would reduce future health costs significantly as evidenced by long-lived cultures in the Blue Zones.
    Given that science shows the pH theory of diet to be false it really does not decrease the argument of the benefits of the diet and focusing on the pH is a diversion by the animal protein producing industry.

  5. I do eat a Paleo-type diet, which has legumes; I used to be strict Paleo until I started getting jittery like I was constantly on caffeine. Once I decreased my animal protein consumption by a few oz per day and substituted easy digesting legumes, like lentils, the jitters went away. This is where I am today.

    In talking to people who are vegetarians, or vegans, the one point they always make is that humans aren’t the only sentient creatures on the planet and that eating animals is a barbaric practice that must be stopped. So for many people vegetarianism isn’t about health, but based upon a belief system that it is wrong or immoral to eat other living things. Taking this to its logical conclusion, one can ask whether eating plants is also wrong, since plants are living organisms. (that is why they are so good for you).

    I don’t condone the cruel, barbaric practices of big ag in the way they treat animals. However, if you look at the animal kingdom, animals are constantly eating other animals and some like wolf packs are quite brutal in the way they kill an animal. A Native American once told me that if you kill an animal, have enough respect for it to eat (or use) all of it. I still try and do this giving what I don’t eat to my dog.

    Wysong, a manufactuer of dog food, has a great video commentatary about the animal kingdom and the food chain. My philosophy, even as a doctor, is to eat whatever makes you feel better. If being a vegetarian works, great. If not, and the thought of eating animals bothers you, then get over it and try it. It might just make you feel better.

    • About animals as sentient creatures. Speaking kindly to plants reportedly will help them grow. Even water reportedly responds to kind words.

  6. If all this animal protein is so important, how come cultures where very little animal protein or none at all is eaten have bone density no less than heavy meat eating cultures? Such as Bantu women in Africa, Buddhist nuns in Nepal to name a couple of studies. How come hip fracture rates are higher in countries where a lot of meat and dairy are eaten?

    • Hi MaryC I would like an answer to your question also.

      Western countries have the highest incidence of osteoporosis because of heavy consumption of dairy products which are acid forming.

      • Sugar & processed carbs perhaps? In third world countries (for want of a better term) where processed carbs are creeping in and replacing traditional diets, the same disease trends are now beginning to appear as in western countries.

        • Angela and Kris Kern,

          I think you would find the following information very interesting. It is taken from the Dr. Sarah Myhill website, which is a goldmine for various types of information concerning health conditions, such as osteoporosis. I have pasted the link below the following excerpt from Dr. Sarah Myhill’s website.

          “The medical profession would have us believe that the only important constituent of bone is calcium. Actually, bone is made up of many different minerals including, in order of proven importance, magnesium, calcium, strontium, boron, silicon, selenium, zinc, chromium and maybe others. For its formation it also requires a whole range of vitamins, essential fatty acids and amino acids. All these nutrients are supplied liberally by a Stone Age Diet based on meat, fish, eggs, nuts, seeds and vegetables. Western civilisation now gets 70% of its calories from four foods, namely grains, dairy, potato and sugar. Sugar is already a refined food, most grains are eaten refined, as are potatoes. The refining process strips out many essential micronutrients and these are further depleted by storage, cooking, packing and light. In addition to this, many other substances we consume have a diuretic effect, in particular tea and coffee and alcohol, and this further strips essential micronutrients from the body. There are a great many studies which show that modern Western diets are markedly deficient in these essential micronutrients.”

          http://www.drmyhill.co.uk/wiki/Osteoporosis_-_a_long_term_complication_of_CFS

          Hope you or anyone finds this useful. I am very slowly recovering from a few different health conditions. ^_^

    • You are confusing the conversation with facts….Even science can not prove why the five Blue Zones have such a large number of long-living populations the animal protein producing industry continues to pollute our environment , use large quantities of water and add significantly to health costs but people enjoy their present diet and find excuses to do so.
      Large numbers of the US population will continue with heart disease and diabetes with the excuse that you can not prove the impact 100%…and say that moderation is the key!

    • Hi MaryC,

      I will try to answer your questio with another question. Why is it that astronauts return with weakend bones after 2 months in space? The answer is continuous NON-weightbearing activity… Bone formation is highly dependent on the piezo-electric effect caused by mechanical load from gravity and weight-bearing activity. In essence, if you have all the nutrients necessary for bone growth but not moving on your feet, very little bonegrowth will occur. So the cultures you mention who eat a lot of meat and have weakened bones (if we have read the same studies, you are probably refering to western cultures), they also lead a much more sedentary life with relatively very little weight-bearing in comparison to the Bantus or the Nepalese people. The Bantus and Nepalese are on their feet all day, so even if they would eat less meat they most likely compensate by creating more piezo-electric activity. As you know MaryC, health is not all about nutrition, and bone growth is a clear example illustrating this. The best thing for our bones would be to eat well AND move well. I hope this helps.

    • High consumption of dairy increases calcium in bones, but without enough magnesium the bones become more brittle and there are more breaks.

  7. This may be a piece of my puzzle- Age 55, osteoporosis as well as arthritis with bone spurs (and an autoimmune disorder)- So yeah, my calcium metabolism is dysregulated. Lightbulb! I’ve already gone paleo/PHD, but it’s only recently that I’ve added HCl supplements. No matter how much protein one eats, if one isn’t breaking it down and absorbing it, one will not get the benefits. Thanks!

  8. I think this article was good in many respects, although it kind of side stepped around one of the main reasons why alkaline diet proponents (i’m not one) claim their way works. They all seem to agree that nothing can change the PH of blood because it is tightly controlled by the body. But, they say that it’s this fact that makes an alkaline heavy diet beneficial – because when a person eats a lot of acid-forming foods the body and organs must work much harder to keep the blood at its correct PH. Consuming too much acid-forming foods means the body is having to constantly work overtime and its this that those in the alkaline camp say can lead to a system overload. It’s like the body goes into fight/defensive mode and over a long period of time, as a byproduct, various health problems occur. Maybe next time someone might address this issue, which, as far as I can tell, is the main thrust of the alkaline argument..

  9. Interesting read as always Chris. I have such fair skin, that I can “see” the results of eating a lot of greens (no inflamation) and the result of coffee or a more acid diet, makes my skin more inflamed (red). I look forward to reading your previous blog articles. I agree that the trial approach to eating will yield the most success.

    • The pH myth has no impact on my healthy whole plant-based diet and had nothing to do with me changing my diet.
      Much ado about nothing…to prove what? Ok, your diet does not significantly change the pH of blood…satisfied?
      Your pH emotions are your problem but the fact is that animal protein production in this country produces serious pollution and utilizes large quantities of water. There is also strong evidence that more whole plant-based foods in the diet would reduce future health costs significantly as evidenced by long-lived cultures in the Blue Zones.
      Have you checked the environmental impact of all the forest cut down in countries like Brazil and Argentine to produce meat? Have you considered that cows produce gases worse than CO2 while trees clean up the air?

      • Richard, do you know what last-wordism is? Do you know it’s a form of rudeness? You’re posting again and again basically the same comments, I haven’t read the whole thread and already I’ve seen you make these comments 3 times.

  10. Chris, the questions you seek answers for make it clear that you are on a quest for knowledge.

    I do not think paleo, vegan or anything is the answer for me. I eat foods that I enjoy, as long as they are real and fresh. I have hear horror stories from both too acidic and too alkaline environments and do not feel the need to mess around with my own Ph.

    I was more acidic than standard a while back. I believe it had something to do with fighting Lyme Disease. Do you think a spike in acidity is caused by a spike in infection, or is this your bodies attempt to kill infection…because if acidic water kills germs, I am confused as to why acidic blood would not.

    • Yes, infection is the cause of acidic saliva. People with signs of infection consistently test positive for acidic saliva. Eliminate the infection in the body and the saliva becomes alkaline. Germs do better in an environment more acidic than a healthy body. Alkalising the body does help fight infection. There can be very noticeable benefit from taking potassium citrate and/or bicarb. So eating an alkaline diet (but not a deficient diet) must have some benefit against infection, even if very minimal.

  11. Thank you Chris, once again, for a very informative, well researched and well thought out podcast. I was wondernig about some of the very same questions you discuss in this podcast and really enjoyed hearing about them from you. The critical thinking and research you do is exactly what we need more of in the health realm today! There is so much misinformation out there and it is difficult to do get to the bottom of it all one one’s own.

    • Sorry, that should be “wondering” and “on” one’s own. I type too fast for my own good!

  12. Chris, thank you, thank you, for addressing this timely topic! It seems that the “alkaline diet” idea is going through a renaissance right now. As a scientist, I see claims that affect me like someone scraping fingernails across a blackboard. And the claims are contradictory and physically impossible, such as sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) can become acidic and eat holes in your stomach. If people would go back to their basic high-school science, they’d avoid a lot of internet junk nutritional advice.

  13. Hi,

    this whole discussion isn’t taking into consideration one simple fact: when you have cancer what do you eat to heal yourself? Tons of organic meat, coconut oil, parboiled rice or fruit and veggies?
    All diseases can be cured at the root only with fruits and veggies (with the help of some herbs) which are alkaline foods, so even if the urine thesis or the blood ph were not true (I do agree), it would’ve been more honest if this discussion would seriously talk about the real benefits of eating a diet based only on fruits and veggies. I’m not saying it’s suitable for everyone and that you cannot have an icecream every week, but the discussion isn’t putting into a good light the alkaline way of eating which is the basis of our health.
    In fact, fruit in the only food in the world we have that stimulates our lymphatic system (our sewage) and if that’s not kept clean, it’s like flushing the toilet of your house and whatever you flushed comes right back out splashing over your house, getting everything dirty (bacteria and disease).

    I have more and more clients that have challenges with paleo because it’s too much acidic, but this will become fully aware in years to come. Now we are too blind by this paleo story and by the weight loss successes and energy uplifting feelings it gives us. We’ll see what happens in 20 yrs from now. Our livers, kidneys and lymphatic/immune systems will be our voices of truth.

    • I like your writing. I was keto/paleo for years meat fat little veg and now am struggling with gallbladder and liver sludge, sibo, ileitis big weight gain despite same foods ans amounts and have no clue what to eat. I’m not saying paleo is bad just that not all of us can handle too many acidic foods. I am now back at square one.

    • When it comes to veggies and fruits, I personally think the antioxidants and/or enzymes found in them plays a much bigger role in one’s health outcome. Not to mention their fiber content and how that has many benefits on gut health, which in turn benefits our overall health. Do you have any evidence that point directly to the alkaline effect of them and not reasons mentioned above?

  14. You’re on point here Chris. The whole acid-base thing doesn’t hold up. The body has an exact balance to keep and pH has to be tightly controlled for enzymes to work properly. I’ve seen my share of patients die (usually methanol poisoning) with a very low pH as the body just stops working.

  15. Are the results for an Array 3 reliable for a patient using tnf-a? Could it potentially “mask/numb” the reaction?

  16. Thank you! Great podcast, perfect timing. I have three short questions here.

    1.This pH effect is only cause by animal protein right? (there is no different between animal fat & plant fat like tallow vs coconut oil)

    2.As you pointed out that CO2 is acid, why low serum CO2 indicate “acidic” environment then? I have low serum CO2 level (around 19mmol/L) while I’m only consuming ~0.8g protein/lb body weight (from meat), but eating lots of animal fat, probably being on mild keto. Beside that I also have kinda high serum uric acid (at 8.2mg/dl), normal-high BUN (19mg/dl) and creatinine (1.1mg/dl) and urine pH or 5.4. My doctor said that I’m “acidic” and told me to eat less animal food. I have no symptoms of gout whatsoever but I wonder could there be something else going on here? (ex.gut dysbiosis and byproduct waste from bad bacteria? as I also have gut issues. or could this be caused by elevated systemic inflammation and/or high intensity workout coupled with poor recovery due to HPA axis problem?)

    3.Although I’m quite sure, these researches are done with animal meat protein alone and not with protein from diary product right? Cos in the latter case there will also be an increased in calcium consumption which I think can easily affect the whole process.

    Thank you so much!

  17. Thanks for this, this is really helpful. This information makes me feel more comfortable continuing with a good amount of protein in my diet.

    When I was initially diagnosed with kidney stones, I was told to cut the amount of protein in my diet, because excess protein could cause calcium to be pulled from my bones (and then it could end up in my kidneys). Later I was told cutting protein probably wasn’t necessary. It’s always tough to figure out what to do when you’ve got conflicting information coming from your doctors, and the same thing when you try to research the issue on your own.

    I ran into the same thing in regard to calcium supplementation. My situation was/is a little tougher to figure out since I was told I have osteopenia in a couple of places. I have to get most of my dietary calcium from plant sources, since I am allergic to dairy.

    • Hello, this podcast started me thinking: does a recommended diet for a person have to do with their blood type? I’ve read various articles on the topic and they seem to focus on the exceptions. However, it seems that most people I know thrive on the foods recommended for their blood type (O= meat, A= vegetables, and B= dairy, I have no idea about AB).

      • Hi Dorrin, there does seem some merit in that advice, but I haven’t read the second book which has more qualifiers to be more accurate. Personally although I’m A I feel the need for some meat..and animal fats.. But I like to mix some vegetarian meals also. I think AB type can eat everything !
        To me there seems merit in checking saliva pH, and keeping it alkaline if possible but there does seem to be a very large number of factors involved, I have been ok by testing but been unhealthy at the same time. safe.com.au sell pH test tape and advise swallowing saliva then making fresh to test. They have a great food chart they send for free to their free members. And do a hair analysis for about $90 AUD. Great company. Cheers