Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Acid food, alkaline food

Should you be eating acid or alkaline foods? Let's see if I can make sense of this. We are oxygen breathing, carbon-based, mildly alkaline life forms. The pH of plasma is 7.35-7.45 and the pH inside our cells is 7.1. If they change much from these levels you will end up in hospital. The body has a number of systems to control the pH in your body (eg lungs and kidneys).

Que? What this thing pH?

Mmmm, I knew this would be tricky from the outset. You may have only heard about pH in shampoo ads. Other readers will remember pH from high school chemistry. The pH is a measure of the hydrogen ions in a solution (ie acidity), that is, the number of hydrogens missing their only electron. A pH of 7 is neutral. The higher the pH the more alkaline. The lower the pH the more acidic. As it is a logarithmic scale, every whole number is a 10-fold difference, so a pH of 5 is 10 times more acidic than a pH of 6. Stomach acid, which is hydrochloric acid, has a pH of about 1. That’s why it burns your throat during regurgitation. Still with me?

Kidneys will sort things out

For a century or so we have known that a high meat/protein diet produces excess acid that must be eliminated from the body via your pee. Foods like meat, chicken, fish, eggs and cheese will generate small amounts of sulphuric and phosphoric acid within the body. If you are a vegetarian then you will likely produce excess alkaline, and this will also exit the body through your pee. This is all quite normal and a happy, healthy body will sort all this out while you get on with life. You will not feel a thing.

Tomato is an acid food, right?

You have probably already deduced that we cannot pick an acid food based on taste. Would you have picked meat as an acid food? It is alkaline on the plate, but will leave an acid residue in the body. Is a tomato an acid food? Nope. Most of the natural acids in tomato will become carbon dioxide and water, leaving a residue of a little potassium bicarbonate, which is, da da da daah, alkaline. Tastes acidic, becomes alkaline. Even when you eat pickled onions, they will land in the hydrochloric acid in your stomach and then trickle into the small intestine where it all the vinegar gets neutralised to a pH of 7 by bicarbonate released from the pancreas.

Acid-base diet does have one major health effect

You will still hear clear-headed health professionals talk about the acid-base balance in your body. Nothing to do with the pH of oranges, tomatoes or lemons or whether they sting your tongue. (By the way, tomatoes don’t cause, or exacerbate, arthritis). As mentioned, eating carcasses of meat each day will generate excess acid which will easily be jettisoned in your pee, but, and here is the problem, along with the acid goes a whole pile of calcium. Eat a very high meat diet for a few years and it will be your bones that suffer. We are happy for you to have that steak sandwich, but please add a whack of salad too as plant foods will help you to keep hold of your calcium stores.

This is also the reason that soft drinks have been linked to poor bone health. Drink a vast amount of soft drink, with an acid pH of 2, and the body will have to rid itself of that extra acid, taking some calcium with it. Of course, when you are quaffing 2-3 litres of soft drink each day (that’s 67-100 ounces of soda) then you are probably not featuring milk in your diet and that compounds the calcium problem.

What does it all mean?

In a healthy body, food does not change the pH of the body, thankfully. Wonderful metabolic processes, evolved over millennia, actively keep the pH of your body within a very fine bandwidth. Forget the “acid” v “alkaline” chat and just eat well, you know, the standard “eat fruit and vegetables, go easy on the cookies, trim the fat off the meat blah, blah, blah” you’ve heard a zillion times. With an emphasis on fruits and vegetables, along with an adequate calcium intake and some sunshine, you will also help your body retain its calcium for bone strength. Just another reason to eat your vegies.

References:

Nutrition Action November 2010

Essentials of Human Nutrition 3rd edition 2007; 110-111

1 comment:

TJ said...

This is the most sensible article I've read regarding gout (and I've read hundreds in the last week)
Thank you