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The Precision Nutrition New York Study
Sponsor: Cornell University
Summary
Dietary fiber has been shown to have beneficial effects on human health through its impact on microbes present in the gut. However, these effects can vary between individuals, and everyone may not reap the same health benefits by eating the same sources of fiber. Factors predicting how an individual's gut microbes as well as the beneficial metabolites produced by these microbes change in response to different sources of fiber would be helpful in developing precision nutrition approaches that maximize the benefits of dietary fiber. The objective of this study is to evaluate candidate predictors of gut microbiota response to fiber sources from either whole grains or fruits and vegetables.
Official title: Optimizing Dietary Fiber Eating Patterns to Prevent Obesity and Resulting Metabolic Disorders
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
21 Years - 50 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
15
Start Date
2025-01-13
Completion Date
2025-12-31
Last Updated
2025-07-11
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Interventions
Whole Grain Intervention then fruits and vegetables
TREATMENT 1: Participants will eat whole grains that add up to the required daily fiber needs. Investigators will provide participants with these products. Participants will follow this intervention for a set period of time. The beginning of the intervention will include a ramp up phase when they eat half of the daily fiber needs to prevent any gastrointestinal distress from suddenly consuming a higher fiber diet than usual. TREATMENT 2: Participants will eat fruits and vegetables that add up to the required daily fiber needs. Investigators will provide participants with these products. Participants will follow this intervention for a set period of time. The beginning of the intervention will include a ramp up phase when participants eat half of the daily fiber needs to prevent any gastrointestinal distress from suddenly consuming a higher fiber diet than usual.
Fruit and Vegetable Intervention and then whole grains
TREATMENT 1: Participants will eat fruits and vegetables that add up to the required daily fiber needs. Investigators will provide participants with these products. Participants will follow this intervention for a set period of time. The beginning of the intervention will include a ramp up phase when participants eat half of the daily fiber needs to prevent any gastrointestinal distress from suddenly consuming a higher fiber diet than usual. TREATMENT 2: Participants will eat whole grains that add up to the required daily fiber needs. Investigators will provide participants with these products. Participants will follow this intervention for a set period of time. The beginning of the intervention will include a ramp up phase when they eat half of the daily fiber needs to prevent any gastrointestinal distress from suddenly consuming a higher fiber diet than usual.
Locations (1)
Cornell University
Ithaca, New York, United States