OH! Magazine - Australian Version April 2015 | Page 15
WHAT IS THE
ALKALINE DIET?
DR
JOANNA
www.drjoanna.com.au
( Nutrition )
Dr Joanna explores this popular nutrition fad.
he Alkaline Diet is often touted by
celebrities as their secret to
feeling and looking so fabulous. It’s
called the alkaline diet – or sometimes
the alkaline-ash diet or alkaline-acid diet
– and proponents claim it can help you to
lose weight, have more energy, reduce
your risk of many chronic diseases
including cancer and have stronger
bones. Sounds pretty awesome doesn’t
it?
T
The theory is that the typical modern
Western diet is affecting the acid load on
the body, with knock-on negative health
effects. Foods that we eat are either acid
forming, or alkaline-forming with some
being more or less neutral. The diet
advises limiting the consumption of acidforming foods, including meat, dairy,
highly processed foods, alcohol, grain
products and refined sugar (although this
is actually not acid or base-producing).
Instead, the recommendation is to eat
plenty of foods that are alkaline-forming,
predominantly fruits and veggies. So the
question is, does it work?
Unsurprisingly, lots of people will lose
weight by following that advice, but not
as a result of any change in body acidity.
Clearly, cutting out processed foods,
added sugar and alcohol while packing
your diet with veggies and fruit is a
positive health move and will, more than
likely, reduce your kilojoule intake and
boost your nutrient consumption. For
these changes, this diet certainly gets my
tick of approval. However there is more to
this than meets the eye. Acidity and
alkalinity is measured using pH on a
scale of 1 to 14. Neutral is a pH of 7,
below 7 indicates acidity, and above 7 is
alkaline. Our blood is slightly alkaline
and although it can vary very slightly, the
body has sensitive systems to ensure it
stays within the range of 7.35 and 7.45.
I have heard people dramatically
announce that their body is acidic, having
had their blood tested. This is just not
possible as they would be severely ill, or
dead! In contrast, other parts of your
body are acidic, purposefully. For
example, your stomach has a pH of about
3.5, sometimes even lower, which is
necessary to start the process of breaking
down the foods that you eat. It also helps to
kill off any micro-organisms that may make
you sick. Your skin is also slightly acidic as
this also helps control the types of microorganisms that live on our skin, so is an
important factor in the skin’s barrier
functions. Where the pH can vary is in
urine. Your kidneys play an important role
in balancing the acidity in the body and
what you eat certainly affects this.
There is some evidence to show that eating
in a way that assists the acid-base balance
in your body does have health benefits. It
reduces the risk of kidney stones and other
kidney problems, may be important in bone
health (although a 2011 review found no
association between dietary acid load and
osteoporosis), may help to reduce muscle
wastage with age, may improve heart health
and brain function, and has even been
associated with less lower back pain. There
seems little doubt that understanding more
about our acid-base balance is crucial to
health. But the question is how to do this.
In the diet world, we tend to oversimplify
things like labelling foods as ‘good’ or
‘bad’. In the case of the alkaline diet the
acid-forming foods are suddenly the bad
guys, while the alkaline-forming foods are
the good. This puts meat as a bad guy – but
also fish, a food that is almost always
thought of in favourable terms, at least
from a nutritional perspective. Also despite
the fact that meat is acid-forming, a high
meat intake is not associated with poor
bone health. In fact quite the opposite is
true. So the picture is more complex than
this diet suggests.
So what can we take home from the
science? The first thing is that there is little
doubt typical modern diets with a high
animal food intake, not nearly enough plant
food, and roughly a third of kilojoules
coming from non-core discretionary foods
(think cakes, biscuits, chips, soft drinks,
junk food and so on) are not good for us.
They are also acid-producing and this may
explain some of the negative health effects.
But the acid-forming potential of a food is
not a sole criteria for judgment as good or
bad! Rather, it is the balance of foods in
our diet that is important, and there are
other characteristics of the food that have
to be taken into account. For example,
meat may be acid-forming but it also
delivers protein, iron, zinc and a wealth of
other nutrients.
The problem therefore, is not meat itself,
but the lack of plant food consumed
alongside. So instead, think of increasing
the alkaline-promoting foods, chiefly
veggies (especially leafy greens), fruit, nuts
and consider using legumes more often as
these are neutral. These foods have many
benefits and most of us are not eating
enough. Cut down on how much salt is in
your diet as this is acid-producing, and
drink more water to help your kidneys work
effectively. But there is no need to take
expensive supplements claiming to be
alkaline, or to follow an entirely vegetarian
diet unless you want to for ethical reasons.
The bottom line is that yes acid-base
balance is important, but so is everything
else we know about nutrition. Eat a whole
food diet with plenty of plant food and
you’re on the right track!
( OH! MAGAZINE ) APRIL 2015
15