8 results match your criteria: "the Netherlands. Electronic address: e.blaak@maastrichtuniversity.nl.[Affiliation]"

Type 2 diabetes and obesity have become major public health concerns. Growing evidence suggests that increased dietary fiber intake, through its interaction with the gut microbiota, may help prevent these diseases. Here, we demonstrate in a 12-week randomized, placebo-controlled trial in individuals at risk for type 2 diabetes that intake of an intrinsic fiber product, consisting of entire plant cells, tended to improve peripheral insulin sensitivity (p = 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Evidence suggests that increased distal short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production beneficially impacts metabolic health. However, indigestible carbohydrate availability is limited in the distal colon; consequently, microbes shift toward protein fermentation, often linked to adverse metabolic health effects. We aimed to identify specific fiber(s) that promote saccharolytic fermentation in the distal colon and thereby may (partially) inhibit proteolytic fermentation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intestinal gases as a non-invasive measurement of microbial fermentation and host health.

Cell Host Microbe

August 2024

Department of Human Biology, Institute of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism (NUTRIM), Maastricht University Medical Center+, Maastricht, the Netherlands. Electronic address:

Microbial fermentation and associated products provide insights into the gut microbiota-host relationship. Here, we propose using improved technologies that allow non-invasive, real-time measurements of intestinal gases as a metric for microbial fermentation. This approach has the potential to provide a basis for personalized interventions that improve host metabolic health.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Influence of the gut microbiota on satiety signaling.

Trends Endocrinol Metab

April 2023

Department of Nutrition and Movement Sciences, NUTRIM School of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Recent studies show a link between the gut microbiota and the regulation of satiety and energy intake, processes that contribute to the development and pathophysiology of metabolic diseases. However, this link is predominantly established in animal and in vitro studies, whereas human intervention studies are scarce. In this review we focus on recent evidence linking satiety and the gut microbiome, with specific emphasis on gut microbial short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cardiometabolic health improvements upon dietary intervention are driven by tissue-specific insulin resistance phenotype: A precision nutrition trial.

Cell Metab

January 2023

Department of Human Biology, NUTRIM School of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism, Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht, the Netherlands; TI Food and Nutrition (TIFN), Wageningen, the Netherlands. Electronic address:

Precision nutrition based on metabolic phenotype may increase the effectiveness of interventions. In this proof-of-concept study, we investigated the effect of modulating dietary macronutrient composition according to muscle insulin-resistant (MIR) or liver insulin-resistant (LIR) phenotypes on cardiometabolic health. Women and men with MIR or LIR (n = 242, body mass index [BMI] 25-40 kg/m, 40-75 years) were randomized to phenotype diet (PhenoDiet) group A or B and followed a 12-week high-monounsaturated fatty acid (HMUFA) diet or low-fat, high-protein, and high-fiber diet (LFHP) (PhenoDiet group A, MIR/HMUFA and LIR/LFHP; PhenoDiet group B, MIR/LFHP and LIR/HMUFA).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Carbohydrates: Separating fact from fiction.

Atherosclerosis

July 2021

Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Heart, Vascular, Thoracic Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA. Electronic address:

The role of carbohydrate in a healthy diet has been controversial. The confusion over carbohydrate has come from the long standing limitation of dietary recall studies as well as inability in many of these studies to delineate between the different types of carbohydrates. It is the aim of this paper, to understand and review the data on the role of carbohydrate as pertaining to weight, insulin resistance, diabetes, inflammation, lipids, as well as epidemiological data on long-term cardiovascular outcome and all-cause mortality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The prebiotic inulin improves substrate metabolism and promotes short-chain fatty acid production in overweight to obese men.

Metabolism

October 2018

Top Institute Food and Nutrition, Wageningen, the Netherlands; Department of Surgery, NUTRIM School of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism, Maastricht University Medical Center+, Universiteitssingel 50, 6229 ER Maastricht, the Netherlands. Electronic address: kaatje.lenaerts@maastrich

Background And Aims: Human gut microbiota play an important role in maintaining human health. Dietary fibers, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of Gut Microbiota Manipulation by Antibiotics on Host Metabolism in Obese Humans: A Randomized Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Trial.

Cell Metab

July 2016

Department of Human Biology, NUTRIM School of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism, Maastricht University Medical Center+, 6229ER Maastricht, The Netherlands; Top Institute Food and Nutrition, 6700AN Wageningen, The Netherlands. Electronic address:

The gut microbiota has been implicated in obesity and cardiometabolic diseases, although evidence in humans is scarce. We investigated how gut microbiota manipulation by antibiotics (7-day administration of amoxicillin, vancomycin, or placebo) affects host metabolism in 57 obese, prediabetic men. Vancomycin, but not amoxicillin, decreased bacterial diversity and reduced Firmicutes involved in short-chain fatty acid and bile acid metabolism, concomitant with altered plasma and/or fecal metabolite concentrations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF