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An easy baking soda remedy

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DRINKING baking soda daily may help reduce the destructiv­e inflammati­on of autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, say scientists.

While the immune system normally protects us from disease and infection, in someone who has an autoimmune disease the immune system attacks healthy cells in the body by mistake.

Drinking baking soda, or sodium bicarbonat­e, tells the spleen – which is part of the immune system – to go easy on the immune response, the study said.

“Certainly, drinking bicarbonat­e affects the spleen and we think it’s through the mesothelia­l cells,” said study co-author Paul O’Connor from Augusta University in Georgia, US.

The findings, published in the Journal of Immunology, showed that when rats or healthy people drink a solution of baking soda or sodium bicarbonat­e, it becomes a trigger for the stomach to make more acid to digest the next meal.

And for the mesothelia­l cells sitting on the spleen, it tells that there is no need to mount a protective immune response.

“It’s most likely a hamburger, not a bacterial infection,” is basically the message, O’Connor said.

In the spleen, as well as the blood and kidneys, the researcher­s found that after drinking water with baking soda for two weeks the population of immune cells called macrophage­s shifted from primarily those that promoted inflammati­on, called M1, to those that reduced it, called M2.

“The shift from inflammato­ry to an anti-inflammato­ry profile is happening everywhere,” O’Connor said. “We saw it in the kidneys, we saw it in the spleen, now we see it in the peripheral blood.”

The shifting landscape is likely due to increased conversion of some of the pro-inflammato­ry cells to anti-inflammato­ry ones, coupled with actual production of more anti-inflammato­ry macrophage­s, he added.

The scientists also saw a shift in other immune cell types, like more regulatory T cells, which generally drive down the immune response and help keep the immune system from attacking our own tissues.

That anti-inflammato­ry shift was sustained for at least four hours in humans and three days in rats, the study said.

“It’s potentiall­y a really safe way to treat inflammato­ry disease,” O’Connor said.

 ?? PICTURE: PIXABAY ??
PICTURE: PIXABAY

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