Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Here's Why A Healthy Diet May Not Always Work

The Canadian Press, 01 Jan, 2017 06:48 PM
    People accustomed to a calorie-rich diet may not be able to reap the full benefits of switching to a healthy diet immediately due to the works of the bacterial community inside the gut, suggests new research.
     
    Certain human gut bacteria need to be lost for a diet plan to be successful, said the study that identified the organisms that help promote the effects of a particular diet.
     
    "If we are to prescribe a diet to improve someone's health, it's important that we understand what microbes help control those beneficial effects," said study senior author Jeffrey Gordon from at Washington University in St. Louis. 
     
    "And we've found a way to mine the gut microbial communities of different humans to identify the organisms that help promote the effects of a particular diet in ways that might be beneficial," Gordon noted.
     
    In order to study how dietary practices influence the human gut microbiota and how a microbiota conditioned with one dietary lifestyle responds to a new prescribed diet, Gordon and his collaborators first took faecal samples from people who followed a calorie-restricted, plant-rich diet and samples from people who followed a typical, unrestricted American diet. 
     
     
    The researchers found that people who followed the restricted, plant-rich diet had a more diverse microbiota.
     
    In the study, published in the journal Cell Host and Microbe journal, researchers also described how they found a way to mine the gut microbial communities of different humans to identify the organisms that help promote the effects of a particular diet in ways that might be beneficial.
     
    The scientists are optimistic that their approach will help guide the development of new strategies for improving the effectiveness of prescribing healthy diets.
     
    "We hope that microbes identified using approaches such as those described in this study may one day be used as next-generation probiotics," Gordon said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death
    EDMONTON — Alberta's human services minister says he didn't botch an investigation into the death of a girl in government care and rejects opposition calls for his resignation.

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support
    TORONTO — The family of a doctor found strangled and beaten to death is expressing gratitude for an outpouring of support.

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start
    OTTAWA — A day-long meeting of first ministers on finalizing a pan-Canadian climate plan is off to a fractious start.

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start

    Snow Arrives To Southern B.C. But Weather Agency Downplays Earlier Predictions

    Snow Arrives To Southern B.C. But Weather Agency Downplays Earlier Predictions
    Monday's flurries marked the first time a significant amount of snow fell on Metro Vancouver in more than two years, causing widespread traffic delays and prompting the closure of several schools.

    Snow Arrives To Southern B.C. But Weather Agency Downplays Earlier Predictions

    CBSA Officer At Peace Bridge Charged In Cross-border Tobacco Smuggling Probe

    CBSA Officer At Peace Bridge Charged In Cross-border Tobacco Smuggling Probe
    HAMILTON — The RCMP says a Canada Border Services Agency officer has been charged in a smuggling investigation.

    CBSA Officer At Peace Bridge Charged In Cross-border Tobacco Smuggling Probe

    UBC RCMP Say 12-Year-Old Girl Found, Reunited With Mom

    UBC RCMP Say 12-Year-Old Girl Found, Reunited With Mom
    The University of British Columbia's RCMP detachment confirms Thursday evening that Zoe Forsyth-Sanford was located.

    UBC RCMP Say 12-Year-Old Girl Found, Reunited With Mom