Oxalate
Cross-source consensus on Oxalate from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Preparation
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Where it comes from
Highlighted claims
- Oxalate can bind minerals, form crystals, and potentially interfere with metabolism. — Biochemical Optimization, Energy Metabolism, Oxalates, and Methylene Blue
- Reducing high-oxalate foods is presented as the most supported practical intervention for oxalate concerns. — Biochemical Optimization, Energy Metabolism, Oxalates, and Methylene Blue
- The article treats the mainstream focus on oxalate as a kidney stone factor as too narrow. — Biochemical Optimization, Energy Metabolism, Oxalates, and Methylene Blue
- High-oxalate foods discussed include spinach, kale, almonds, raspberries, beets, and sweet potatoes. — Biochemical Optimization, Energy Metabolism, Oxalates, and Methylene Blue
- Oxalate is linked strongly to calcium oxalate kidney stones and more speculatively to pain, urinary symptoms, skin eruptions, dental tartar, and old injury-site pain. — Biochemical Optimization, Energy Metabolism, Oxalates, and Methylene Blue
- Citrate from lemon juice is described as plausible support for solubilizing oxalate. — Biochemical Optimization, Energy Metabolism, Oxalates, and Methylene Blue