Intestinal Microbiota of Older Japanese Females Adhering to a Traditional Japanese Brown Rice-Based Diet Pattern
Kouta Hatayama, Aya Ebara, Chihiro Hirano, Kanako Kono, Hiroaki Masuyama, Iyoko Ashikari

TL;DR
This study found that older Japanese women who follow a traditional brown rice-based diet have a healthier gut microbiota compared to those on a standard Japanese diet.
Contribution
The study identifies a link between a traditional Japanese diet and a healthier gut microbiome in elderly women.
Findings
The Shokuyo diet group showed significantly different gut microbiota β-diversity compared to the normal Japanese diet group.
The microbiota of the Shokuyo group resembled that of healthy individuals, suggesting a health benefit.
Disease status in the normal Japanese diet group strongly influenced microbiota differences.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Some Japanese people still adhere to a systematic traditional Japanese diet pattern (the Shokuyo diet) consisting mainly of brown rice, vegetables, legumes, and small amounts of fish. We investigated the impact of this dietary pattern on the intestinal microbiota of its female consumers. Methods: The intestinal microbiota of 19 Japanese females in their 60s and 70s consuming the Shokuyo diet (Shokuyo diet group) and 50 females of the same age consuming a normal Japanese diet (NJ diet group) were compared. The NJ diet group was further subdivided into a healthy NJ diet H subgroup, comprising females (n = 19) without any diseases, and an unhealthy NJ diet UH subgroup (n = 31) consisting of females with certain diseases, and a subgroup analysis was performed. Intestinal microbiota analysis was performed using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Results: The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Probiotics and Fermented Foods · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research
