When you're in a cool room, you produce more saliva than when you're in a warm room, whether or not you drink beetroot juice.
Scientific Claim
Cool air exposure (20°C) increases salivary flow rate in healthy young males regardless of nitrate supplementation, with mean salivary flow rates of 723 ± 256 µL/min in placebo conditions versus 592 ± 196 µL/min in normothermic placebo conditions.
Original Statement
“Compared with PL-Norm (592 ± 196 µL·min−1), mean SFR was higher in BR-Norm (697 ± 246 µL·min−1; P = 0.02, dz = 0.54), PL-Cool (723 ± 256 µL·min−1; P = 0.02, dz = 0.67), and BR-Cool (758 ± 261 µL·min−1; P = 0.01, dz = 0.85)”
Evidence Quality Assessment
Claim Status
appropriately stated
Study Design Support
Design supports claim
Appropriate Language Strength
definitive
Can make definitive causal claims
Assessment Explanation
The study design allows for causal inference about this specific comparison. The language accurately reflects the measured difference without overgeneralization.
Evidence from Studies
Supporting (1)
Nitrate ingestion blunts the increase in blood pressure during cool air exposure: a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, crossover trial