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Comparison of the low-calorie DASH diet and a low-calorie diet on serum TMAO concentrations and gut microbiota composition of adults with overweight/obesity: a randomized control trial

Zhipeng Diao, Jalall Molludi, Hawal Latef Fateh, Sara Moradi

2023International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition19 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study compares two diets, Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) and a Low-Calorie Diet on Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) levels and gut microbiota. 120 obese adults were randomly allocated to these three groups: a low-calorie DASH diet, a Low-Calorie diet, or a control group for 12 weeks. Outcomes included plasma TMAO, lipopolysaccharides (LPS), and gut microbiota profiles. After the intervention, the low-calorie DASH diet group demonstrated a greater decrease in TMAO levels (-20 ± 8.1 vs. -10.63 ± 4.6 μM) and a significant decrease in LPS concentration (-19.76 ± 4.2 vs. -5.68 ± 2.3) compared to the low-calorie diet group. Furthermore, the low-calorie DASH diet showed a higher decrease in the Firmicutes and Bactericides (F/B) ratio, which influenced TMAO levels, compared to the Low-Calorie diet (p = 0.028). The current study found the low-calorie DASH diet improves TMAO and LPS in comparison to a Low-Calorie diet.

Topics & Concepts

DashCalorieDASH dietOverweightGut floraLow calorieVery low calorie dietLow calorie dietPrebioticTrimethylamine N-oxideObesityMedicineFood scienceInternal medicineBiologyWeight lossBiochemistryImmunologyTrimethylamineComputer scienceOperating systemBlood pressureGut microbiota and healthDietary Effects on HealthDiet and metabolism studies
Comparison of the low-calorie DASH diet and a low-calorie diet on serum TMAO concentrations and gut microbiota composition of adults with overweight/obesity: a randomized control trial | Litcius