Alkaline Diet Meals
The Alkaline diet (also known as the alkaline ash diet,
alkaline acid diet and the acid alkaline diet) is a dietary
protocol based on the consumption of foods which burn to leave
an alkaline residue. Minerals containing elements like calcium,
iron, magnesium, zinc, copper, are the principal components of
the ash, as they are incombustible. This burning is compared to
the way in which foods are catabolised to produce wastes. Foods
are thus classified as alkaline, acid or neutral according to
the pH of the solution created with their ash in water.
In general, the diet involves eating certain fresh citrus
fruits, vegetables, tubers, nuts, and legumes and avoiding
grains, dairy, meat . Such a diet helps to maintain the balance
of the slight alkalinity (7.35-7.45) of blood without stressing
the body's regulators of acid-base homeostasis.
Metabolic acidosis may indicate the presence of disease such
as diabetic ketoacidosis or may have other causes, like
exercise-induced lactic acidosis; likewise metabolic alkalosis
may be caused by chronic conditions such as hypokalemia-induced
alkalosis, or temporary, such as hyperventilation.
In the absence of these, bodily pH will be maintained within
a narrow range irrespective of diet. Rather, the health effects
of an alkaline diet are generated by reducing the body's need
to utilize internal stores of mineral buffers, such as the
calcium stored in bones, to maintain the pH balance,
particularly as renal function declines with age.
The wide ranging health claims[citation needed] for this
diet originate in the observation that an underlying metabolic
acidity is a common denominator among many degenerative and
autoimmune diseases.
Studies have been conducted showing certain health benefits
(increased bone mass) in specific populations (older people) as
a result of taking alkaline (potassium bicarbonate)
supplements, with conclusions extrapolated as to the analogous
effect of alkaline-rich diet: "Increasing alkaline content of
the diet with bicarbonate supplementation significantly reduced
levels of the bone turnover markers urinary N-telopeptide and
calcium excretion (both P=0.001); Because fruits and vegetables
are metabolized to bicarbonate, a dietary approach may have a
similar effect."
A similar theory, called the Hay diet, was developed by the
American physician William Howard Hay in the 1920s. A later
theory, called nutripathy, was developed by another American,
Gary A. Martin, in the 1970s.Others who have promulgated
alkaline-acid diets include Edgar Cayce, D. C. Jarvis, Robert
Young, Herman Aihara,Fred Shadian, and Victor A.
Marcial-Vega.
The theory behind the alkaline diet is not widely accepted
by the medical community, as it runs contrary to conventional
theories of disease.
|