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    Random, interesting studies

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    • E Offline
      Ena
      last edited by

      Sorry, but I'm lost in chemistry.

      I make my own electrolyte drink by dissolving a couple of teaspoons of the ingredients below in one litre of water.

      • potassium bicarbonate (KHCO₃) = potash
      • sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO₃) = baking soda
      • magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄) = epsom salt
      • iodised table salt (99.9% NaCl + iodione as potassium iodate)

      I have no other sources of iodine than table salt, and I probably get too much salt even though it doesn't actually taste too salty. (one can get used to a lot)

      There is much fuss about baking soda, but does it matter whether the bicarbonate comes from one source or another? That is, can I skip adding the baking soda?

      DavidPSD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • C Offline
        CrumblingCookie @Mossy
        last edited by CrumblingCookie

        @Mossy Good question. There appears to be a way to embed the Na or K bicarbonate in a stomach-acid-resistant hydrogel.
        Can you find out how they're using the listed ingredients to obtain an effective hydrogel in the Maurten Bicarb system? They use Maltodextrin, Fructose, Modified starch, Hydroxypropyl cellulose, Magnesium stearate, Xanthan gum to bind the sodium bicarb.

        Filling capsules really takes its time when those acid-resistant caps don't come as separated halves but must be pulled apart one by one before placing them in the capsule filler trays.
        I have scoured the interwebs and found that buying sodium bicarb supplements in excipient-free, stomach-acid-resistant HPMC+gellan or HPMC-pectin capsules can cost "as little" as the same quantity of empty enteric capsules for a capsule filler at home.
        But there are no sellers for KHCO3 capsules at all because of that annoying ban on anything above 100mg K in supplements. I'm therefore hovering on the thought of buying more HPMC+gellan capsules to fill at home.

        @Ena said:

        does it matter whether the bicarbonate comes from one source or another? That is, can I skip adding the baking soda?

        By what I know it doesn't matter and one can choose whatever form of (bi)carbonate one prefers!
        Honestly, the whole kidney function explanations keep confusing me.

        What I've kept is that a solid amount of aldosterone benefits bicarbonate retention. Therefore reasonably low amounts of sodium should indeed be better for higher bicarbonate retention, I guess?
        That would also mean that the ARBs, Angiotensin Receptor Blocker medications (and the ACE inhibitors to a degree as well), bear the potential to significantly screw with bicarbonate balance because of their aldosterone suppression. That alone is a large group of people.

        MossyM C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • DavidPSD Offline
          DavidPS @Ena
          last edited by DavidPS

          @Ena said in Random, interesting studies:

          There is much fuss about baking soda, but does it matter whether the bicarbonate comes from one source or another? That is, can I skip adding the baking soda?

          Yes, yes. Skip the baking soda. Short-term studies on healthy athletes using baking soda (NaHCO₃) do not address long-term health and longevity.

          Dietary sodium is hoarded by our bodies and we tend to waste potassium. The ratio of sodium/potassium in our diet is important for blood pressure, insulin resistence, osteoporosis, diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease and other diseases that occur as we get older. Read the details in The High Blood Pressure Solution: A Scientifically Proven Program for Preventing Strokes and Heart Disease (pdf)

          Don't separate work and play; it is all play. 👀
          ☂️

          C E 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • C Offline
            CrumblingCookie @DavidPS
            last edited by CrumblingCookie

            @DavidPS
            Interesting book!

            • In contrast, dry cows (those not producing milk) or beef steers are
              equally healthy whether or not they are given supplemental salt,7 and the
              same is true for other domestic animals.8 And although wild herbivores
              such as deer have been reputed to travel great distances to go to natural salt
              licks, it is difficult to substantiate this belief. For example, Dr. A. R. Patton
              analyzed mud sent in by forest rangers from areas in the Montana Rockies
              where wild animals congregate to lick the soil. The rangers called these
              sites salt licks, but Dr. Patton did not find sodium in any of the mud
              samples. What he did find, however, was iodine,9 an element needed to
              make thyroid hormone.*
            • the total of the sodium plus the potassium inside the cell is constant:
              Na + K = constant
              The reasons for this have to do with the laws of physics and are outlined
              in Chapter 4. Here’s the bottom line: It is impossible to lower sodium inside
              the cell without replacing it with potassium. That’s why these two
              substances are intimately linked in an inescapable balance. A low sodium
              diet can’t possibly work unless it contains enough potassium to replace the
              sodium inside the body’s cells.
            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • MossyM Offline
              Mossy @CrumblingCookie
              last edited by

              @CrumblingCookie said in Random, interesting studies:

              I have scoured the interwebs and found that buying sodium bicarb supplements in excipient-free, stomach-acid-resistant HPMC+gellan or HPMC-pectin capsules can cost "as little" as the same quantity of empty enteric capsules for a capsule filler at home.

              Great info. Thank you!

              "To desire action is to desire limitation" — G. K. Chesterton
              "The true step of health and improvement is slow." — Novalis

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • E Offline
                Ena @DavidPS
                last edited by

                [bicarbonate of potassium or sodium]

                Thanks @DavidPS and @CrumblingCookie.
                I'll skip the baking soda from now on ...

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • MauritioM Offline
                  Mauritio @dapose
                  last edited by

                  @dapose said in Random, interesting studies:

                  I’m using Boswellia every night before bed with baking soda and glycine water. Most consistent vivid dreams I’ve had as an adult!
                  It’s a COX enzyme blocker, very good anti inflammatory for me.

                  Nice! Do you notice any hormonal or metabolic effects from it ?

                  Dare to think.

                  My X:
                  x.com/Metabolicmonstr

                  daposeD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • C Offline
                    CrumblingCookie @CrumblingCookie
                    last edited by CrumblingCookie

                    @mossy @ena
                    Enteric HPMC+gellan capsules work well for encapsulating bicarbonate.
                    The pectin coating of enteric HPMC+pectin capsules, however, reacts with (potassium) bicarbonate, discolours it and their purpose of reliable stomach-resistance fails. I've found that out myself. Don't use the capsules with pectin-coating.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • daposeD Offline
                      dapose @LucH
                      last edited by

                      @LucH Merci Beaucoup! This is very interesting strategy you and your AI has come up with! But how long to alternate between M1 and M2 states? Does a guy just skip baking soda every other day? Or more like load up for one week then stop for a week? Or should it be more intuitive like reading the weather or the environment, like if I eat out and get stay up too late, I should be in defense mode, and then if things are running smooth and I feel good and happy, I go into repair mode… ?
                      Does this M1/M2 thinking ably to aspirin as well?
                      Thanks again. Very interesting

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • daposeD Offline
                        dapose @Mauritio
                        last edited by

                        @Mauritio said in Random, interesting studies:

                        @dapose said in Random, interesting studies:

                        I’m using Boswellia every night before bed with baking soda and glycine water. Most consistent vivid dreams I’ve had as an adult!
                        It’s a COX enzyme blocker, very good anti inflammatory for me.

                        Nice! Do you notice any hormonal or metabolic effects from it ?

                        Nothing too specific on hormonal or metabolic front. But I’ve gone on and off Boswellia a few times and it without a doubt makes dreams more vivid and way more memorable for me.

                        A side not… I recently started taking Gonadin by Idealabs (first time and for about a week) I read every single comment on the old RPF for Georgi’s thread and I saw your name pop up a few times in that thread. Did you like taking Gonadin? Are you still using it to any regularity? And specifically the newest version of it…
                        peace!

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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