| Literature DB >> 23402436 |
Chih-Yang Huang1,2,3, Chia-Hua Kuo4,1, Chien-Wen Hou4, Yung-Shen Tsai4, Wei-Horng Jean5, Chung-Yu Chen4, John L Ivy6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Deep oceans have been suggested as a possible site where the origin of life occurred. Along with this theoretical lineage, experiments using components from deep ocean water to recreate life is underway. Here, we propose that if terrestrial organisms indeed evolved from deep oceans, supply of deep ocean mineral water (DOM) to humans, as a land creature, may replenish loss of molecular complexity associated with evolutionary sea-to-land migration.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23402436 PMCID: PMC3583772 DOI: 10.1186/1550-2783-10-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Soc Sports Nutr ISSN: 1550-2783 Impact factor: 5.150
Figure 1Geographic location of DOM collection. The black square designates the site of seawater collection, providing the shortest piping distance from land down to the deep site of the ocean (a depth of 662 meters off the coast of Hualien, Taiwan) along the circum-Pacific belt (known as Pacific Ring of Fire) in East Asia.
Minerals and trace elements in deep ocean mineral water (DOM) drink
| Na | 38.3 | 119 |
| K | 75.6 | 115.6 |
| Ca | 53.1 | 54.6 |
| Mg | 3.24 | 140 |
| Trace element | Placebo (μg/L) | DOM (μg/L) |
| Li | N. D. | 17 |
| Rb | N. D. | 16 |
| B | N. D. | 1590 |
| Osmolarity | 226 (mOsm/L) | 249 (mOsm/L) |
Figure 2Human physical performance. DOM accelerated the recovery of aerobic capacity after a fatiguing exercise (A), and increased lower-body muscle power performance (B) during recovery. *significance against Placebo, P < 0.05; †significance against Pre, P < 0.05. N. D.: non-detectable.
Figure 3Stress hormones. Exercise challenge elevated plasma IL-6 (A) and EPO levels (B, P < 0.05) for both trials to a similar extent. Testosterone dropped on both trials during recovery (C, P < 0.05), and returned to baseline by 24 h during recovery. No group differences in stress hormone responses were found after the physical challenge. †significance against Pre, P < 0.05.
Figure 4Muscle damage markers. Exercise-induced muscle damage was suppressed by DOM, as indicated by attenuated CK (A) and myoglobin (B) responses during recovery. DOM also attenuated oxidative damage (TBARS) increased by exercise (C). *significance against Placebo, P < 0.05; †significance against Pre, P < 0.05.