What the Study Actually Did
This wasn’t a single experiment, it was a systematic review and meta‑analysis, meaning the authors pulled together multiple high‑quality studies on sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) and analyzed the overall effect.
They looked at:
Performance outcomes
Fatigue markers
Side effects
Dosing strategies
Exercise types (endurance, high‑intensity, repeated efforts)
This is the kind of paper that shapes guidelines — not just one-off findings.
Key Findings (Translated for Runners)
1. Sodium bicarbonate works — consistently
Across the pooled studies, bicarbonate supplementation produced statistically significant improvements in:
Time to exhaustion
Peak power
Mean power
Repeated high‑intensity efforts
Where it shines: Efforts lasting 1–10 minutes, or repeated surges where acidity builds up.
Think:
Hill repeats
VO₂max intervals
Fast finishes
Shorter trail races with punchy climbs
Surges in ultras (e.g., passing, steep pitches)
2. It reduces fatigue by buffering acidity
The mechanism is simple but powerful:
Hard efforts → hydrogen ions accumulate → muscles burn
Bicarbonate raises extracellular pH
This delays the burn, letting you hold intensity longer
The study confirmed this effect across many exercise types.
3. The effect size is meaningful
The meta-analysis found a moderate performance improvement — not tiny, not massive, but real and repeatable.
For competitive athletes, this is the kind of edge that matters.
4. GI distress is the main limiter
This is the Achilles heel.
Across studies:
~30–50% of athletes experienced some GI symptoms
Higher doses = more issues
Timing and form matter
This is why newer systems (like Maurten Bicarb) are getting attention — they solve the biggest barrier.
Dosing Insights (General, Not Personalized)
The study summarized what most trials used:
0.2–0.3 g/kg sodium bicarbonate
Taken 60–180 minutes before exercise
Often split into multiple smaller doses to reduce GI issues
Again — this is general research context, not a personal protocol.
What This Means for Trail & Ultra Athletes
Even though bicarbonate is traditionally studied in short-duration events, the Endless Acres angle is this:
Where it can help in trail/ultra contexts
Short, steep climbs
Hard surges
Technical bursts
VO₂max workouts in training
Time trials
Uphill intervals
Races with repeated anaerobic spikes (e.g., Moose Mountain, Black Lung)
Where it’s less useful
Long, steady aerobic efforts
All-day pacing
Fuel-limited events where carbs, hydration, and electrolytes dominate performance
Endless Acres Takeaway
Sodium bicarbonate is one of the most proven ergogenic aids in sports nutrition — right up there with caffeine and creatine — but it’s also one of the least used because of GI issues.
The 2021 meta-analysis reinforces:
It works
It’s reliable
It’s best for high-intensity segments
GI tolerance is the bottleneck
Newer delivery systems may change the game (Maurten Bicarb)
For Alberta trail runners, it’s a tool worth understanding — especially for training blocks where you’re pushing intensity.
