
[NOTE: This paper was presented at the 6th Annual Cayce Health Professionals
Symposium, September 15, 2001 in Virginia Beach, VA.]
BACKGROUND
Acid/alkaline balance has assumed a prominent status among complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) approaches. The increasing use of biological terrain assessment (BTA), the Heidelberg acid test, and functional medicine techniques attest to the emphasis placed on acid/alkaline by many CAM practitioners (1-3). Commonly referred to as “pH” (potential for hydrogen), the acid/alkaline continuum ranges from 0 - 14 with 7 as neutral. The lower end of the scale (below 7) is acid and above 7 is alkaline.
Acid/alkaline balance is extremely important to normal physiology. For example, the blood will maintain a slightly alkaline range of 7.35 to 7.45. Extended pH imbalances of any kind are not well tolerated by the body. The management of the pH factor is so important that the body's primary regulatory systems (especially breathing, circulation, eliminations) closely regulate acid-alkaline balance in every cell and system.
This brief report discusses a preliminary study involving the measurement of urinary pH in conjunction with certain dietary modifications. Conceptually, this study is based on ideas from the work of Edgar Cayce, a medical intuitive credited in a JAMA editorial as a primary influence in the development of modern holistic medicine (4). Cayce emphasized the importance of maintaining a balanced pH with a slight tendency toward alkalinity. According to Cayce, numerous factors can increase acidity including negative emotional states, inadequate mastication of food, and poor eliminations. The most common factor cited by Cayce is diet. Eating acid-producing foods or combining foods improperly (even alkaline-producing foods) is said to lead to systemic hyperacidity. Cayce linked increased acidity (as measured via urine and saliva) to higher risk of developing infectious disease such as cold and flu (9). Reilly and Brod (5) and Mein (6) have provided excellent reviews of Cayce's views on diet and acid-alkaline balance.
A diet consisting of 80% alkaline-producing foods (e.g., fruits and
vegetables) and 20% acid-producing foods (e.g., meats and grain) was often
recommended by Cayce. Some foods (such as citrus) may be acid outside
the body, but produce an alkaline effect when eaten. Cayce insisted
that acid/alkaline balance could be easily checked and encouraged the measurement
of pH balance in saliva and urine as an objective means of monitoring this
crucial aspect of physiology.
METHODS
A research conference provided an excellent opportunity to apply Cayce’s suggestions and measure the results. The conference participants included seven people suffering from arthritis, three persons with high blood pressure, a man with diabetes, and five support persons. We asked these individuals to provide urine samples during eight days of the conference (Nov 13 - Nov 21, 1998). Each person collected a sample at each urination; a total of 472 samples were collected and measured for pH. We requested that the samples be taken to an office within 30 minutes after urination during office hours (7am – 9pm). Overnight samples were delivered to the office by 8 am the next morning. pH measurements were performed within 60 minutes of arrival of the sample. We used simple digital testers (pH Testr 2, Davis Instruments, Baltimore, MD) to measure the pH of the urine. We decided not to test saliva, as the instruments require a significant amount of material, making urine much more practical for a large group of individuals. Although potential risks for this design were minimal, all participants were informed and provided written consent.
Participants were given a notebook containing information on acid/alkaline balance, recommendations for maintaining a tendency toward alkalinity, and an extensive list of acid-producing and alkaline producing foods based on standards described by Mein (1995). In general, an alkaline diet consists primarily of vegetables except dried beans, lentils, asparagus tips, and garbanzos; fresh fruits except cranberries, plums, olives, prunes, and blueberries; almonds, chestnuts, Brazil nuts, and hazelnuts. Acid-producing foods include meats; grains, cereals, and bakery products except for soybeans; dairy except buttermilk, yogurt, raw milk and whey; peanuts, pecans, and walnuts.
Participants were also provided a ninety-minute lecture on acid-alkaline
balance and how to work with the Cayce diet. A cook experienced in
the Cayce diet was hired to prepare all meals during the conference.
Meals offered during the conference provided a preponderance of alkaline-producing
foods (mainly fruits and vegetables).
RESULTS
As the conference proceeded, there was a trend for the group as a whole to produce higher levels of alkaline urine with regard to total number of samples that reached neutral (7.0) or above (alkalinity). Also, the percentage of individuals whose urine reached 7.0 or above increased during the conference.
Eleven people in the group provided pH data for the full eight days of measurement. They provided a mean of 4.89 (SD = 2.08) urine samples per day. There was some variability in pH with time of day, so daily means for each individual were used for analysis. For each person, we compared the mean pH for the first four days to the mean pH for the second four days. All the participants showed a more alkaline pH; the mean increase in pH was 0.41 (range 0.02 to 0.86). The overall average for the first four days was a pH of 6.13 (SD = 0.25) and the overall average for the second four days was 6.54 (SD = 0.31). A paired t-test demonstrated that this difference was significant at better than the 0.01 level (t = 4.45, p = .0012, n = 11). Thus we can conclude that following the Cayce diet does produce a more alkaline urine.
From a data standpoint, November 17 was particularly noteworthy.
On the previous day a lecture was given in which the importance of eating
mostly alkaline foods was emphasized. Participants were asked to
test one of the ideas from the Cayce readings. Cayce suggested that
consuming citrus would have a strong alkalizing effect on the body.
Most of the participants agreed to try only citrus for breakfast on November
17. Dramatically, the urine of all of the participants reached 7.0
or above on that day (Figure 1). Apparently, citrus foods have a strong
alkalizing effect on urine pH.
Acid/alkaline balance is a complex and controversial subject. Views on this topic range from an almost total disbelief that pH is a significant factor in disease to the opposite extreme as exemplified by the book “Alkalize or Die” (7). The experts who acknowledge that a neutral or slightly alkaline pH is good, disagree on what this means with regard to body fluids. For example, some researchers consider a slightly acid urine pH to be normal (healthy) because it might indicate that the body is eliminating acids that are a natural product of metabolism. Other experts maintain that the urine should be close to neutral or slightly alkaline. Cousens takes a relatively moderate position, stating that a pH range of 6.3 to 7.2 is “healthy.” (8)
Edgar Cayce repeatedly insisted that certain infectious agents (such as cold virus) do not thrive in an alkaline environment. When asked how to prevent colds, Cayce replied, "… by keeping the body alkaline. Only in acids do colds attack the body." (9)
Interestingly, many viruses (10-20), including the rhinoviruses most often responsible for the common cold (21) infect host cells by fusing with the cell membrane at low pH. Thus a mildly acidic environment is required for optimal infectivity of such pH-dependent viruses. Drugs that increase intracellular pH (alkalinity) have been shown to decrease infectivity of rhinovirus (22).
Furthermore, the antimicrobial effects of many substances are pH-dependent. For example, Berberine sulfate, the most active antibacterial alkaloid in goldenseal, is more effective in an alkaline than an acid environment. At a pH of 8.0 (alkaline), its antimicrobial activity in vitro is about 2 to 4 times greater than at 7.0 (neutral). At an acid pH of 6.0, the antimicrobial activity is only 1/4 as strong as at a neutral pH (23). Similar patterns of pH-dependency have been noted for several antibiotics (24) and antimicrobial dyes (25).
To this point, almost all the studies on the pH features of infectious
diseases have been in vitro. The preliminary study described in this
article is an initial step in the investigation of in vivo pH as related
to diet. Future studies may include experimental rhinovirus infection
in which experimental and control groups follow different diets (predominately
alkaline-producing vs. acid-producing) to measure relative resistance to
cold infection.
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