Analyze & Optimize Profile picture
Aug 12 10 tweets 5 min read Read on X
An astounding study shows that 1/2 a teaspoon of baking soda lowers inflammation within hours.

(🧵1/9)Image
Study was published in 2018 in The Journal of Immunology.

Some experiment were done in rodents including baking soda in the water.

Some groups had their vagus nerves cut.

Other animals had a surgery to disturb the spleen.

Both surgeries were done to see if these tissues mediated the effect of baking soda.

Then, the human studies were done comparing drinking 2g of baking soda dissolved in water vs 2g of salt.

(2/9)Image
Animals consuming baking soda in the water showed decreased inflammation in several areas.

In both the kidneys and in the spleen, they had decreased inflammatory M1 macrophages, one of the primary immune cells.

Baking soda increased M2 macrophages, signifying that the macrophages turned into a more anti-inflammatory phenotype.

They also had:

↑IL-10 in the kidney (anti-inflammatory cytokine)
↑FOXP3 cells in blood + kidney (Treg cells, anti-inflammatory immune cells)
↓CD4 T Cells (inflammatory)
↓CD44 T cells (inflammatory)
↓TNFα macrophages (primary inflammatory mediator)

(3/9)Image
The more baking soda consumed, the lower the inflammation.

Animals consuming up to 0.1M baking soda had substantially lower ratios of M1/M2 macrophages, reflecting an anti-inflammatory skewing of these immune cells.

(4/9) Image
In humans, taking 1/2 teaspoon of baking soda rapidly reduced inflammation.

Within an hour, it shifted immune profile toward less inflammation by:

↓ M1 macrophages
↓ TNFα neutrophils (primary inflammatory cell)
↑ M2 macrophages

in the blood.

(5/9) Image
Baking soda's anti-inflammatory effects were dependent on the spleen.

If the spleen was either completely removed (splenectomy) or moved around, there was no difference in the inflammatory macrophages in the kidneys.

The fact that the spleen could be simply moved meant that the collagenous tissue surrounding the spleen is necessary.

(6/9)Image
Baking soda also cut the amount of inflammatory T cells that were proliferating by nearly half.

Another indicator that it is lowering inflammation systemically.

(7/9) Image
Baking soda's anti-inflammatory effects were blunted if a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor blocker (MLA) was given.

That means that baking soda's benefits act on the same receptors in the immune system that nicotine does.

More on that below.

(8/9)

Image
Why is baking soda such a good anti-inflammatory?

Since baking soda's effects were dependent on the spleen, the vagus nerve and the tissue surrounding the spleen, it's clear that it is acting through this system.

The vagus nerve connects to the spleen, which houses many immune cells where they can mature into their distinct types. They found here that the connective tissue surrounding the spleen is vital for this interaction.

Activating the vagus nerve tends to calm these immune cells into anti-inflammatory varieties.

This is incredibly relevant for a host of conditions.

The researchers mentioned diseases mediated by inflammatory macrophages & excessive TNF-α:

➥ Rheumatoid arthritis
➥ Cardiovascular disease
➥ Atherosclerosis
➥ Irritable bowel disease
➥ Type 2 diabetes
➥ Neurodegenerative diseases

Diseases benefitted by having more Tregs:

➥ Allergy
➥ Asthma
➥ Multiple sclerosis
➥ Graft-versus-host disease
➥ Diabetes
➥ Hypertension

Meaning baking soda could have a role in treating all of these.

(9/9)Image
Baking soda has been helpful for a ton of our clients as a part of a personalized plan, and we could help you next.

For personalized help with any of your health goals, schedule a free call with us here: go.prism.miami/consultation

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Analyze & Optimize

Analyze & Optimize Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @Outdoctrination

Aug 15
The longest study to date has shown that aspirin has a powerful cancer preventing effect.

(🧵1/7)Image
The study was published at the beginning of this year in The International Journal of Cancer.

It examined 1.5 million people in Hong Kong over 20 years.

Another similar study out of Denmark came shortly before this, showing no benefit of aspirin on cancer.

However, that study did not adjust for competing factors, such as dying from heart disease.

But given aspirin's many known beneficial impacts on cancer, it was time to re-investigate.

(2/7)Image
They examined people taking 80 mg (baby) aspirin daily, and those who didn't.

These were the baseline characteristics, before they started aspirin.

As you can see, the aspirin group was much less healthy in about every way.

Older, more smokers, more disease across the board, taking more drugs.

Some of these differences are insane: double the amount of hypertension, 15X more strokes.

You'd think they would have way more cancer, right?

(3/7)Image
Read 11 tweets
Aug 14
A recent study showed eye floaters can be substantially reduced with a few nutrients.

(🧵1/8)
The study was published in 2021 in Translational Vision Science & Technology.

Floaters are incredibly common, and can be very bothersome.

People with them are often "willing to trade 1.1 years of every 10 years of their remaining life to get rid of their floaters."

Despite this, treatments are limited to expensive surgeries / lasers.

(2/8)Image
People with floaters were randomized to either placebo or an active group.

The intervention was capsules of:

➟ 125 mg l-lysine (dietary amino acid)
➟ 40 mg vitamin C
➟ 26.3 mg Vitis vinifera (grape) extract
➟ 5 mg zinc
➟ 100 mg Citrus aurantium (bitter orange)

1 cap per day, 6 months.

(3/8)Image
Read 12 tweets
Aug 12
Glycine markedly improves sleep quality and daytime energy, with less than a teaspoon.

(🧵1/9)Image
The first study investigating glycine and sleep came out in 2006.

Subjects taking 3g of glycine within an hour before bed reported:

➠ Substantially decreased fatigue the next day
➠ Improved subjective sleep quality

They also reported feeling:

➠ Very lively
➠ Extremely peppy
➠ Very refreshed
➠ More clear headed in the morning

(2/9)Image
Image
The next study was published the following year, from the same research group.

People taking 3g of glycine prior to bed had:

↑ Sleep satisfaction
↑ Sleep efficiency (ratio of sleep time to the whole time in bed)
↓ Difficulty falling asleep
↓ Time to fall asleep

compared to placebo.

(3/9)Image
Image
Read 9 tweets
Aug 11
A new study shows that a 1/3 of a clove of garlic reduces insulin resistance and even induces weight loss.

(and no, it's not just a correlation)

(🧵1/6)Image
The study was published on August 6, in the Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition.

Researchers examined women with PCOS and insulin resistance, two conditions known to often go hand in hand.

(2/6) Image
Women in the study had no other medical conditions.

They had no prior garlic consumption.

The study was for 8 weeks.

Garlic was administered as a tablet, with a 2-3 mg allicin content, which is the major bioactive compound in garlic.

This amount is equivalent to ~1/3 of a clove, chopped, if it is allowed to sit out for 10-30 mins.

(3/6)Image
Read 6 tweets
Aug 11
A study has shown that DHEA replacement reverses several key signs of aging.

(🧵1/9)Image
This study was published in the Journal of Aging.

DHEA levels decline by about 80% from age 25 to age 75.

Low levels of DHEA predict death.

Thus, researchers wanted to see if restoring it back to youthful levels could have a benefit.

(2/9)

Image
Over 100 people were in the study.

On average, 70 years old.

People were given 50 mg of DHEA for a year, and then had the option of continuing on for another year.

(3/9) Image
Read 12 tweets
Aug 10
A surprising new study showed that a LOW protein diet boosts metabolism and improves insulin sensitivity.

(🧵1/9)Image
This study was published in Nature back in March.

There were a few phases.

1. Studying the immediate effects of an extremely low protein meal (high in carbs or high in fat)
2. Looking at the longer term (5 week) effects of a diet low in protein (high in either carbs or fat)

The low protein meals/diets had 8-9% calories from protein, high protein meals/diets had double that.

The high carb low protein diets had ~70% calories from carbs, ~20% fat.

The high fat low protein diets ~50% calories from fat, 40% carbs.

(2/9)Image
A low protein high carb meal increases oxygen uptake and respiratory exchange ratio.

More oxygen in, more CO2 out, meaning more energy production.

Higher metabolism.

(3/9) Image
Read 11 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(