Beetroot Dosing Protocol

TL;DR

Performance: 70–140 mL beetroot juice (~300–500 mg nitrate) taken 2–3 hours pre-exercise. Blood pressure: 250 mL/day (~70 mmol nitrate/L) or 70 mL concentrated shot 1–2× daily, morning fasted. Cycling: 5 days on / 2–3 days off to mitigate nitrate tolerance. Avoid: antiseptic mouthwash 24–48 h around dosing. Screen for: PDE5 inhibitors, organic nitrates (contraindicated), antihypertensives (monitor BP), kidney stone history, G6PD deficiency.

Dosing Formats

FormatDoseNitrateBioavailabilityNotes
Beetroot juice (fresh/frozen)70–140 mL~300–620 mg~90–100%Highest quality evidence; perishable; taste is the main compliance barrier
Beetroot juice concentrate shot30–50 mL~300–500 mg~90–100%Higher concentration per mL; equivalent PK to juice
Beetroot powder (freeze-dried, encapsulated)As labeled~300–500 mg~70–85%Long shelf life; verify nitrate content via Certificate of Analysis (CoA)
Sodium/potassium nitrate solutionCalculated300–500 mg~95–100%Precise dosing; less outcome data than beetroot; regulatory uncertainty
Beetroot extract (solid tablet/capsule)VariableOften underdosedVariableQuality control is the primary concern — many products deviate 30–70% from labeled content

Avoid enteric-coated formulations — these bypass the oral conversion step, eliminating the vascular benefit mechanism.

Timing

GoalTimingRationale
Exercise performance2–3 h pre-exercisePeak plasma nitrate (Tmax ~1–2 h); window covers warm-up and early exercise
Blood pressure (chronic)Morning fasted2–4 h peak aligns with morning BP surge; consistent daily timing for trend tracking
Both goalsAM fasted dose + separate 2–3 h pre-exercise doseSplit approach; caution on total daily nitrate — do not exceed ~600 mg startup without monitoring

Cycling Protocol

Nitrate tolerance develops after 7–14 days of continuous high-dose supplementation. Without cycling, the BP-lowering effect attenuates substantially.

Recommended cycling schedule:

ScheduleOnOffNotes
5 on / 2 offMonday–FridaySaturday–SundayStandard; works well for most users
7 on / 3 off1 week3 daysMore conservative; better for users with strong tolerance signal
5 on / 2–3 offMonday–FridaySaturday–Sunday (+ Monday)Preferred for Vitals coaching; allows weekly trending on consistent days

Evidence gap: Optimal cycling frequency is mechanistically justified but has not been formally tested in RCTs. The recommendation is based on PK/PD logic and the known 7–14 day tolerance onset.

Mouthwash Protocol

Antiseptic mouthwash (chlorhexidine gluconate, cetylpyridinium chloride) kills the oral nitrate-reducing bacteria required for the entero-salivary pathway.

Required behavior:

  • Stop: Discontinue antiseptic mouthwash 24–48 h before beetroot dosing
  • Avoid during cycle: Do not use chlorhexidine or CPC rinses on beetroot supplementation days
  • Alternative: Use non-antiseptic fluoride toothpaste and alcohol-free, non-antibacterial mouthwash during beetroot cycles
  • If medically necessary: Accept that beetroot benefit will be significantly reduced; discuss with prescribing clinician

Drug Interaction Screening Summary

RED — Contraindicated (Do Not Proceed Without Physician Consultation)

DrugReason
PDE5 inhibitors (sildenafil/tadalafil/vardenafil)Additive NO-cGMP amplification → severe hypotension, syncope, MI, stroke
Organic nitrates (nitroglycerin, isosorbide dinitrate, isosorbide mononitrate)Same nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway; synergistic vasodilation

AMBER — Use With Caution and Monitoring

Drug ClassRecommendation
Antihypertensives (ACE-I, ARBs, beta-blockers, CCBs, thiazides)Start with lower beetroot dose (70 mL, not 140 mL). Monitor morning BP for 1 week after initiating beetroot. Advise patient to report lightheadedness, dizziness, or syncope. Coordinate timing with prescribing physician.
SSRIsImpaired methemoglobin reductase activity → elevated methemoglobinemia risk with high-dose nitrate. Watch for cyanosis, headache, chocolate-brown blood. Not an absolute contraindication but requires vigilance.

LOW — Partial Efficacy Reduction Only

Drug / BehaviorEffectRecommendation
PPIs / H2 blockersReduce gastric acid → modest reduction in non-enzymatic nitrite-to-NO conversion; pathway largely intactMonitor for reduced response; not dangerous
AntibioticsBroad-spectrum antibiotics suppress oral nitrate reducers; 2–4 week recoveryRetest pathway function after antibiotic course; rebaseline before expecting full beetroot effect
Low-nitrate diet baselineBackground vegetable intake confounds crossover designsAdvise consistent dietary nitrate intake or record 24 h dietary recall at baseline visits

Safety Flags

Oxalate / Kidney Stones

Beetroot contains oxalate (~150–200 mg/100g). At high chronic doses (>500 mL/day), oxalate load may increase calcium oxalate stone risk in recurrent stone formers.

Mitigation: Adequate hydration; consider lower doses (70 mL rather than 140 mL); monitor for hematuria or stone recurrence in history-positive patients.

Methemoglobinemia

Rare but possible in:

  • G6PD deficiency — theoretical risk; monitor SpO₂
  • SSRIs — impaired methemoglobin reductase
  • Gastric surgery patients — altered nitrite metabolism

Signs: Cyanosis, headache, chocolate-brown blood (dark venous blood). If observed, discontinue and seek medical evaluation.

SpO₂ monitoring: Routine monitoring not required in healthy users. Monitor only in at-risk populations (G6PD deficiency, concurrent SSRI use, known nitrate sensitivity).

Hypotension

Active hypotension (SBP <90 mmHg) or orthostatic hypotension is a contraindication. Beetroot can exacerbate low BP, especially when combined with antihypertensives.

Special Populations — Excluded or Unstudied

  • Pregnant/lactating women: Safety not established; exclude from protocols
  • Children/adolescents: No systematic safety or dosing data
  • Severe CKD (eGFR <30): Impaired renal nitrate clearance; potassium content (~250–300 mg/100g) relevant for hyperkalemic CKD
  • End-stage heart failure (NYHA III–IV): Unstudied; hemodynamics may be compromised
  • Critical limb ischemia (Fontaine III–IV PAD): Unstudied; potentially highest-risk population

Protocol Summary

ParameterRecommendation
FormatBeetroot juice (fresh/frozen) preferred; powder acceptable with CoA verification
Performance dose70–140 mL (~300–500 mg nitrate), 2–3 h pre-exercise
BP dose250 mL/day or 70 mL concentrate shot 1–2× daily, morning fasted
Cycle5 days on / 2–3 days off
MouthwashStop antiseptic rinses 24–48 h before beetroot; avoid during cycle
RED drugsPDE5i, organic nitrates — contraindicated; do not proceed
AMBER drugsAntihypertensives — start low (70 mL), monitor BP week 1; SSRIs — vigilance for methemoglobinemia signs
SafetyKidney stone history → hydrate + lower dose; G6PD/SSRI → monitor SpO₂; hypotension → contraindicated
Expected peak2–4 h post-dose for BP; acute performance window ~2–6 h
Evidence gapCycling protocol not formally tested; non-responder identification not possible without microbiome testing