Diet-induced metabolic acidosis
- 01Western diets can create chronic, low-grade metabolic acidosis
- 02This state is linked to a higher risk of kidney stones
- 03It is also associated with insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk
- 04Caused by high animal product and low fruit/vegetable intake
A Western-style diet may create a low-grade acidic state in the body, increasing risks for kidney stones, insulin resistance, and heart disease.
The modern Western-type diet is deficient in fruits and vegetables and contains excessive animal products, generating the accumulation of non-metabolizable anions and a lifespan state of overlooked metabolic acidosis, whose magnitude increases progressively with aging due to the physiological decline in kidney function. In response to this state of diet-derived metabolic acidosis, the kidney implements compensating mechanisms aimed to restore the acid-base balance, such as the removal of the non-metabolizable anions, the conservation of citrate, and the enhancement of kidney ammoniagenesis and urinary excretion of ammonium ions. These adaptive processes lower the urine pH and induce an extensive change in urine composition, including hypocitraturia, hypercalciuria, and nitrogen and phosphate wasting. Low urine pH predisposes to uric acid stone formation. Hypocitraturia and hypercalciuria are risk factors for calcium stone disease. Even a very mild degree of metabolic acidosis induces skeletal muscle resistance to the insulin action and dietary acid load may be an important variable in predicting the metabolic abnormalities and the cardiovascular risk of the general population, the overweight and obese persons, and other patient populations including diabetes and chronic kidney failure. High dietary acid load is more likely to result in diabetes and systemic hypertension and may increase the cardiovascular risk. Results of recent observational studies confirm an association between insulin resistance and metabolic acidosis markers, including low serum bicarbonate, high serum anion gap, hypocitraturia, and low urine pH.
- APA
- María M Adeva, & Gema Souto (2011). Diet-induced metabolic acidosis. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/diet-induced-metabolic-acidosis/
- MLA
- María M Adeva, and Gema Souto. "Diet-induced metabolic acidosis." 2011, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/diet-induced-metabolic-acidosis/.
- Chicago
- María M Adeva, Gema Souto. 2011. "Diet-induced metabolic acidosis.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/diet-induced-metabolic-acidosis/
- Ep. —Podcast Recommendations: One Idea Gives Birth to Another.
Människan & maskinen and Myter & mysterier Per Johansson and Eric Schüldt have together created several podcast series that explore human nature, technological development, and ex…
- Ep. 05252. Mitochondrial dysfunction & new trends in medical science
Something happens when you start to place more importance on the whole than the parts. A hot topic in medical science is mitochondrial dysfunction, a condition that has been linke…
