DOI: 10.3390/jal6030049 ISSN: 2673-9259

Alkaline Water and Muscle Health in Aging: A Systematic Evidence Map and Translational Appraisal of Human Evidence

Tariq A. Alalwan, Giuseppe Mazzola, Lucia Chiesa, Mariangela Rondanelli, Simone Perna

Alkaline water is increasingly marketed for musculoskeletal and recovery benefits, yet its relevance to healthy aging, sarcopenia prevention, and functional capacity in older adults remains largely unexplored. This systematic evidence map and translational appraisal examined whether the available comparative human evidence on alkaline water is applicable to aging populations and longevity research. Following PRISMA guidance, PubMed and Scopus were searched from January 2005 to September 2025. Eligible studies were controlled or comparative observational human studies reporting muscle strength, physical performance, or recovery outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed using RoB 2, ROBINS-I, and JBI criteria; evidence certainty was judged narratively using GRADE-informed principles. Ten studies met the inclusion criteria. Most enrolled young athletic populations; only two had partial relevance to aging cohorts. Crucially, no study included participants aged 65 years or older or assessed primary sarcopenia-relevant endpoints such as appendicular lean mass, gait speed, or chair-rise performance; this total absence of data in the target demographic represents the central limitation of the current literature. Risk of bias ranged from some concerns to serious. The most consistent signals were short-term improvements in lactate clearance and perceived exertion in young male athletes. Evidence for strength, functional performance, and safety in older adults was absent or indirect. Current evidence, rated low to very low certainty for aging-relevant outcomes, does not support alkaline water as an evidence-based strategy for healthy aging or muscle preservation in older adults. Age-appropriate trials using EWGSOP2-aligned outcomes are urgently needed.

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