Plain-English Summary
Mineral water acid-base trial in Healthy adult volunteers consuming mineral waters with different bicarbonate content. Bicarbonate-rich mineral water can affect urinary markers and net acid excretion.
VV Study Evidence Matrix v1.0
VV Evidence Utility Score
A bounded score for how useful this study is in public explanation, based on evidence tier, design, applicability, endpoint relevance, limitations, safety signals, and publication/source strength.
65/100
Limited Public Evidence
- Evidence tier
- 78/100, weight 18%
- Design strength
- 78/100, weight 18%
- Applicability
- 75/100, weight 16%
- Endpoint relevance
- 35/100, weight 16%
- Limitations transparency
- 50/100, weight 12%
- Safety signal usefulness
- 45/100, weight 10%
- Publication/source strength
- 91/100, weight 10%
Useful for context, but limited by endpoint relevance, safety signal usefulness, limitations transparency.
How the study framework works ->Key Findings
- Bicarbonate-rich mineral water can affect urinary markers and net acid excretion.
- Urinary effects should not be confused with changing blood pH in healthy people.
Limitations
- Healthy adult study; disease outcomes were not the endpoint.
Why It Matters
Bicarbonate-rich mineral water can affect urinary markers and net acid excretion.
Viral Vitalism Verdict
Useful evidence, bounded by design: Healthy adult study; disease outcomes were not the endpoint.
Sources
- Effects of mineral waters on acid-base status in healthy adults - Food & Nutrition Research
Signal cards
Used in signals
Signal coverage connected to this study through explicit study links, canonical source refs, or evidence visualizations.
Alkaline Water Will Not Fix Your pH
Alkaline diets and waters can move urine chemistry and may matter in narrow reflux or kidney-stone contexts. They do not alkalize your blood, cure cancer, detox your body, or override acid-base regulation.
VV Signal Score
54
Early or context-dependent
- Sources
- 12
- Studies
- 10
- Claims
- 10
Claim ledger
Relevant claims
Claim ledger records connected through this study's ID, topic tags, or source IDs.
alkaline water: Alkaline water can change urine chemistry in some contexts,
Alkaline water can change urine chemistry in some contexts, but it does not meaningfully alkalize blood or override normal acid-base regulation in healthy people.
acid base balance: Bicarbonate-rich mineral water can raise urine pH and reduce
Bicarbonate-rich mineral water can raise urine pH and reduce net acid excretion in some contexts, but this is narrower than universal alkaline-health marketing.
acid base balance: Urine pH strips can show dietary acid-base changes, but
Urine pH strips can show dietary acid-base changes, but urine pH is not proof that the blood, tumors, or the whole body have been alkalized.
alkaline water: Urine alkalinization can matter for some stone types, but
Urine alkalinization can matter for some stone types, but commercial alkaline waters often provide too little alkali to replace clinician-directed stone prevention strategies.
alkaline water: High-pH or bicarbonate-rich water may help some reflux or
High-pH or bicarbonate-rich water may help some reflux or heartburn contexts through stomach-adjacent mechanisms such as pepsin inactivation or buffering, but it is not a general GERD cure.
alkaline water: Small exercise studies suggest possible hydration or anaerobic-performance markers
Small exercise studies suggest possible hydration or anaerobic-performance markers from alkaline water, but the evidence is not strong enough for broad performance or health claims.
