View Single Post
Old 01-10-2013, 07:54 PM
mudfud27 mudfud27 is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 9
10 yr Member
mudfud27 mudfud27 is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 9
10 yr Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by lurkingforacure View Post
Thanks for this, but where do you get this information from? Are you in the medical field and know this from your profession, or have you read it somewhere?- I do not see how all you say can be true when I see the testing strips myself, several times a day, and I can tell you they vary from morning to evening and also depending on what we have eaten. There are rather large swings in pH that are undeniable.

I am not buying any product to regulate our pH: just watching what we eat, and it does make a difference....unless you are saying those strips have no validity. I can see a difference if we spit on the strip versus pee on it as well, but the most telling change is first morning urine versus later in the day, and what we eat.

As for these pH strips, I think they work, although they may not have the specificity of a lab. For example, if we put some tap water on the strip, the pH is much more alkaline than if we just put some spring water on it, and the difference between the two is not insignificant.

I don't mean to offend, you just sound very definitive and what you say does not reconcile with what I have been seeing the past several days.
I'm a physician (neurology specialist with fellowship training in movement disorders) with a Ph.D. in cell and molecular biology.


May I ask what bodily fluid you're measuring? If your blood pH varies by more than about 0.05-0.1 unit, you are sick enough to require hospitalization. Generally speaking this is not enough variation to see on the kinds of pH strips they sell for use on pool water etc.; digital meters are more reliable.

Moreover, the pH of your urine or saliva tells you nothing about the pH of your blood (which is the only relevant thing when worrying about "body pH" and how medications might affect that); the urine is a sink for excess H+ ions.

There are plenty of things to be concerned about if you have a neurodegenerative disease. Your pH isn't one of them.
mudfud27 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
"Thanks for this!" says:
Aunt Bean (01-12-2013), Lemonlime (01-10-2013), lurkingforacure (01-10-2013), soccertese (01-10-2013)