May 3, 2022

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Diet type can increase potentially harmful gas in the gut

Credit: CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Published in Clinical Nutrition, researchers from the University of Minnesota Medical School looked at the production of colonic hydrogen sulfide—a toxic gas in the body that smells like rotten eggs—in people in response to animal- and plant-based diet interventions.

"Although the role of hydrogen sulfide has long been a subject of great interest in the pathogenesis of multiple important diseases—such as , , and obesity—past investigations have not been able to link dietary data, microbiome characterization and actual hydrogen sulfide production," said Alexander Khoruts, MD, a gastroenterologist in the U of M Medical School and M Health Fairview. "This is what we have done here."

From a human cohort, the study supports the general hypothesis that hydrogen sulfide produced by the gut microbiota increases with an animal-based diet. However, the results also suggested the existence of gut microbiome enterotypes that respond differentially and even paradoxically to different dietary input.

The study found that:

"The study was consistent with the general understanding that regular intake of fiber-containing foods is beneficial to gut health," said Dr. Levi Teigen, a nutrition researcher in the Division of Gastroenterology in the U of M Medical School. "Future analyses of the gut microbiome may help to individualize nutrition interventions."

More information: Levi Teigen et al, Differential hydrogen sulfide production by a human cohort in response to animal- and plant-based diet interventions, Clinical Nutrition (2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2022.03.028

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