Thursday, December 25, 2025
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

    Police Identify Man Found In Scrap Yard In Maple Ridge, B.C.

    Police Identify Man Found In Scrap Yard In Maple Ridge, B.C.
      The Integrated Homicide Investigations Team says police were called Tuesday when a body was found with signs of foul play.

    Police Identify Man Found In Scrap Yard In Maple Ridge, B.C.

    Ultra Low Cost Travel Set to ‘Take-Off in Surrey

    Ultra Low Cost Travel Set to ‘Take-Off in Surrey
    Travel Innovation Announced at Surrey Board of Trade.

    Ultra Low Cost Travel Set to ‘Take-Off in Surrey

    RCMP In Port Alberni Make Quick Arrest After Man Hurt In Early-Morning Stabbing

    RCMP In Port Alberni Make Quick Arrest After Man Hurt In Early-Morning Stabbing
    RCMP say the 51-year-old Port Alberni man was in a fast food restaurant in that city at about 7:30 a.m. Wednesday when he was repeatedly stabbed.

    RCMP In Port Alberni Make Quick Arrest After Man Hurt In Early-Morning Stabbing

    Vancouver Home Sales Plunge 38.8% Last Month, Real Estate Board Says

    Vancouver Home Sales Plunge 38.8% Last Month, Real Estate Board Says
     2,233 properties were sold in October of this year, down from the 3,646 home sales recorded in the same month last year.

    Vancouver Home Sales Plunge 38.8% Last Month, Real Estate Board Says

    Kolkata-Born Sarabjit Singh Marwah Becomes Canada's First Sikh Senator

    Kolkata-Born Sarabjit Singh Marwah Becomes Canada's First Sikh Senator
    Toronto-based Marwah, who retired as from Scotiabank in 2014, is among six people from Ontario who have appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. 

    Kolkata-Born Sarabjit Singh Marwah Becomes Canada's First Sikh Senator

    Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To Walking On Yellowstone Spring

    Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To Walking On Yellowstone Spring
    The National Park Service says Hamish McNab Campbell Cross pleaded guilty Tuesday to foot travel in a thermal area and disorderly conduct by creating a hazardous condition. He agreed to pay more than $8,000 in fines and fees.

    Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To Walking On Yellowstone Spring