Malic acid supplement gave huge energy boost, reduced brain fog and muscle pain

Discussion in 'Drug and supplement treatments' started by jnmaciuch, Feb 19, 2025 at 11:28 PM.

  1. Daisymay

    Daisymay Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Could it therefore be dangerous to take malic acid do you think?
     
  2. Murph

    Murph Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I'd like to make two little points that leave me keen to do structured testing on folk remedies.

    1. The idea that "if it worked, we'd know by now" is probably not true for a range of useful treatments. Patients are so variable, approaches to testing common products are so variable (e.g. i misread the thing and used teaspoons not tablespoons) and reporting of effects is so variable.

    A group of mixed responses in a forum like this creates the impression: "this probably doesn't work" whereas a treatment that provided a 20% boost to 30% of people would actually be pretty helpful to have.

    2. When the theory is not present to explain why a treatment works, evidence gets downgraded. I always think about the banana diet, which existed for ages before coeliac disease was understood and kept a lot of people alive who would otherwise have died, but wasn't taken seriously or used widely (or even used properly, even its proponent thought kids needed to be on it for a year or two max). Is there a banana diet for mecfs out there somewhere, being used half-heartedly and looking ridiculous?!
     
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  3. Murph

    Murph Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Here's a paper for you @jnmaciuch! These guys find d-malate inhibits metabolism (in mice). This is one of those chirality things ... What's the mix of L and D malate in natural foods vs in supplements?

    . 2024 Feb;25(2):524-543. doi: 10.1038/s44319-023-00028-y. Epub 2024 Jan 22.
    Microbiota derived D-malate inhibits skeletal muscle growth and angiogenesis during aging via acetylation of Cyclin A
    Penglin Li 1 , Jinlong Feng 1 , Hongfeng Jiang 1 , Xiaohua Feng 1 , Jinping Yang 1 , Yexian Yuan 1 , Zewei Ma 1 , Guli Xu 1 , Chang Xu 1 , Canjun Zhu 1 , Songbo Wang 1 , Ping Gao 1 , Gang Shu 2 3 4 , Qingyan Jiang 5 6 7
    Affiliations
    Abstract
    Metabolites derived from the intestinal microbiota play an important role in maintaining skeletal muscle growth, function, and metabolism. Here, we found that D-malate (DMA) is produced by mouse intestinal microorganisms and its levels increase during aging. Moreover, we observed that dietary supplementation of 2% DMA inhibits metabolism in mice, resulting in reduced muscle mass, strength, and the number of blood vessels, as well as the skeletal muscle fiber type I/IIb ratio. In vitro assays demonstrate that DMA decreases the proliferation of vascular endothelial cells and suppresses the formation of blood vessels. In vivo, we further demonstrated that boosting angiogenesis by muscular VEGFB injection rescues the inhibitory effects of D-malate on muscle mass and fiber area. By transcriptomics analysis, we identified that the mechanism underlying the effects of DMA depends on the elevated intracellular acetyl-CoA content and increased Cyclin A acetylation rather than redox balance. This study reveals a novel mechanism by which gut microbes impair muscle angiogenesis and may provide a therapeutic target for skeletal muscle dysfunction in cancer or aging.
     
  4. jnmaciuch

    jnmaciuch Established Member

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    Honestly we're very far outside the range of what has been studied, so I can only speculate. It could be equally likely that the malate-aspartate shuttle is shut down by a stressor (it's known that COVID can inhibit the oxidative arm of the TCA cycle, for example) and just isn't recovered in people with ME/CFS because of some genetic anomaly that otherwise would never cause a noticeable effect. My main point was just that it's a complicated system and cellular stress responses can sometimes be a black box before a lot of concerted effort is put into researching them.

    Though since multiple pwME have reported taking magnesium malate and tolerating it well, there doesn't seem to be much existing evidence towards it being particularly dangerous.
     
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  5. jnmaciuch

    jnmaciuch Established Member

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    Thanks for the link, and good question! The wikipedia page states that only L-malic acid is found naturally in foods but I wasn't able to find where in the references that claim was coming from...either way, in the chemical composition studies I've browsed quickly, it seems like L-malic acid is the dominant type listed
     
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  6. Arnie Pye

    Arnie Pye Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    That happened to me with L-glutamine. It worked well in calming stomach problems for quite a while (I can't remember how long exactly), then I started getting very severe and very painful stomach cramps. When I stopped the L-glutamine those problems went away.
     
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  7. Mij

    Mij Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I crave sauerkraut and eat lots of it. I love drinking the leftover juice as well.
     
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  8. Turtle

    Turtle Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    @jnmaciuch
    Can I try sumac when I also have diabetes?
     
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  9. jnmaciuch

    jnmaciuch Established Member

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    I don't think there's enough information to predict exactly how it would affect you with any confidence. I experienced the need to eat frequently on the full supplement dosage so it seems like it might affect blood sugar, but I don't have diabetes. At this point it's a "try at your own risk" type of thing
     
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  10. Peter Trewhitt

    Peter Trewhitt Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I am probably over cautious about trying anything new. I guess with supplements they could be initially tried in small quantities. Given sumac is an increasingly common flavouring it should be OK for most, though with ME it can be that all bets are off.

    It is great @jnmaciuch, that you are investigating this option and I hope you get funding to progress this investigation.

    But also the forum rule not to give ‘medical advice’ is important, so if anyone has any concerns about the safety of any supplements ideally they should discuss it with their own physician first.
     
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  11. Turtle

    Turtle Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Have you studied it enough then to ask people to try it. Try at your own risk does not sound professional to me.
     
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  12. jnmaciuch

    jnmaciuch Established Member

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    People post on forums like these all the time sharing their experiences about supplements or treatments that have not been explicitly and rigorously studied in the context of ME/CFS. Every person who reads a post about, say, L-glutamine and decides to try it themselves is doing it at their own risk. I was just asking for people to share their experiences with it if they made the decision to try it themselves, and shared full disclosure of my experiences, background, and the scope of available knowledge on the subject.

    I wish I had the resources to run a full trial examining tolerability across different comorbidities--and if I had that, I wouldn't need to ask folks on a forum for their experiences.
     
    Last edited: Feb 22, 2025 at 3:35 AM
  13. Nightsong

    Nightsong Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    When I used to have a question like this, I'd look it up in the Merck Index or Ullmann's Encyclopaedia, one of which would always have the most salient references. My old copy of Merck has L-malic acid as the naturally occurring form:

    malic2.jpg
     
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