2012 · Ostojic — Serum alkalinization and hydrogen-rich water in healthy men.
Super-Abstract
This publication investigates serum alkalinization effects of hydrogen-rich water in healthy men. The full abstract was not available in the source data. For detailed methodology and results, please refer to the original article via DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2012.02.008 (Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2012).
Commentary
This paper, published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings by Ostojic — a prolific H₂ sports medicine researcher — appears to address serum alkalinization as an effect of hydrogen-rich water in healthy male subjects. Given the journal venue (Mayo Clinic Proceedings) and the author's consistent research program around HRW and acid-base balance, this is likely a controlled study of pH or bicarbonate changes. The 2014 companion paper by the same author (PMID 24392771, Research in Sports Medicine) confirmed a significant alkalizing effect of HRW in physically active men, suggesting this earlier 2012 paper may represent preliminary data from the same research program. No abstract text was available for this entry — the full text should be consulted for specifics.
Key quotes
- „No abstract text available in source data. Please consult the original article via DOI 10.1016/j.mayocp.2012.02.008.“ — abstract unavailable — findings cannot be verified from this source alone
Our assessment
No abstract was available for this entry. No findings, effect sizes, or conclusions can be reported or inferred. The study is listed in Mayo Clinic Proceedings (evidence level 2 as assigned), suggesting a controlled design, but without the abstract or full text, the methodology and results cannot be evaluated. Given the author and journal, this is likely a small controlled study on acid-base effects of HRW. Readers should consult the original via DOI before citing this work.
Study design
- Type: not determinable from available data · n: unknown · H₂ delivery: hydrogen-rich water (likely drinking) · Population: healthy men (inferred from title)
- Result: not available — abstract was empty in source data; DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2012.02.008
Source & links
Screenshot of the PubMed page
This page mirrors the published abstract (© the authors / publisher) for reference and citation. The canonical source is the PubMed record linked above. This is not medical advice.