A 48-Hour Vegan Diet Challenge in Healthy Women and Men Induces a BRANCH-Chain Amino Acid Related, Health Associated, Metabolic Signature.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the metabolic effects of a short-term, nutritionally balanced vegan diet versus an omnivorous diet on blood sugar regulation, blood lipids, and amino acid metabolism in healthy participants.
Results Summary
The vegan diet significantly lowered triglycerides, insulin, HOMA-IR, bile acids, and altered branched-chain amino acid metabolism while improving cholesterol control. Plasma amino acid and magnesium levels correlated with dietary intake, and polyunsaturated fatty acids and fiber inversely correlated with insulin and triglycerides.
Population
21 healthy participants (11 female, 10 male).
Effective Dosage
Individual caloric needs met; exact amounts not specified.
Duration
3 days.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
vegan diet | decrease | triglycerides | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | lowers | #1 |
vegan diet | decrease | insulin | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | lowers | #2 |
vegan diet | decrease | homeostatic model assessment (HOMA-IR) | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | lowers | #3 |
vegan diet | decrease | bile acids | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | lowers | #4 |
vegan diet | increase | magnesium levels | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | elevated | #5 |
vegan diet | neutral | branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) metabolism | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | changed | #6 |
vegan diet | increase | insulin and blood sugar control | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | potentiating | #7 |
vegan diet | increase | cholesterol control | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | improves significantly | #8 |
- | increase | plasma amino acid and magnesium concentrations | - | - | positively correlate | #9 |
polyunsaturated fatty acids and dietary fiber | decrease | insulin | - | - | inversely correlate | #10 |
polyunsaturated fatty acids and dietary fiber | decrease | HOMA-IR | - | - | inversely correlate | #11 |
polyunsaturated fatty acids and dietary fiber | decrease | triglycerides | - | - | inversely correlate | #12 |
- | neutral | nutritional biochemistries, BCAAs, insulin, and HOMA-IR | - | - | impacted by | #13 |
short-term, healthy, controlled, vegan diet challenge | increase | health-promoting, BCAA-associated metabolic signature | 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants | - | produced | #14 |
SCOPE: Research is limited on diet challenges to improve health. A short-term, vegan protein diet regimen nutritionally balanced in macronutrient composition compared to an omnivorous diet is hypothesized to improve metabolic measurements of blood sugar regulation, blood lipids, and amino acid metabolism. METHODS AND RESULTS: This randomized, cross-over, controlled vegan versus animal diet challenge is conducted on 21 (11 female,10 male) healthy participants. Fasting plasma is measured during a 3 d diet intervention for clinical biochemistry and metabonomics. Intervention diet plans meet individual caloric needs. Meals are provided and supervised. Diet compliance is monitored. CONCLUSIONS: The vegan diet lowers triglycerides, insulin and homeostatic model assessment (HOMA-IR), bile acids, elevated magnesium levels, and changed branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) metabolism (p < 0.05), potentiating insulin and blood sugar control after 48 h. Cholesterol control improves significantly in the vegan versus omnivorous diets. Plasma amino acid and magnesium concentrations positively correlate with dietary amino acids. Polyunsaturated fatty acids and dietary fiber inversely correlate with insulin, HOMA-IR, and triglycerides. Nutritional biochemistries, BCAAs, insulin, and HOMA-IR are impacted by sexual dimorphism. A health-promoting, BCAA-associated metabolic signature is produced from a short-term, healthy, controlled, vegan diet challenge when compared with a healthy, controlled, omnivorous diet.