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Science & Research

Peer-reviewed research behind our approach

We believe health information should feel both credible and clear. Below, you’ll find selected peer-reviewed studies presented in a simple, readable format so you can explore the research for yourself.

Gut Health • IBS Pilot Study

Artificial intelligence-based personalized diet: A pilot clinical study for irritable bowel syndrome

Gut Microbes2022

A pilot study in IBS-M patients found that a personalized microbiome-informed nutrition approach was associated with stronger symptom improvement than a standard IBS diet over 6 weeks.

Focused on IBS-M patients using microbiome-guided personalized nutrition.
Reported meaningful improvement in IBS symptom severity.
Observed microbiome changes including an increase in Faecalibacterium.

Why it matters

This study helps support the broader idea that microbiome-informed nutrition may improve digestive symptoms and patient experience in a more personalized way.

Gut Health • Functional Constipation

Efficacy of AI-Assisted Personalized Microbiome Modulation by Diet in Functional Constipation: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal of Clinical Medicine2022

This randomized controlled trial found that a personalized microbiome-based diet outperformed conventional therapy on patient-reported outcomes in functional constipation.

Compared personalized microbiome-based nutrition with conventional treatment.
Reported increased complete bowel movements per week after intervention.
Showed strong improvements in constipation-related quality of life measures.

Why it matters

This study helps support the broader idea that microbiome-informed nutrition may improve digestive symptoms and patient experience in a more personalized way.

Gut Health • IBS Multicenter Trial

A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial of Microbiome-Based Artificial Intelligence-Assisted Personalized Diet vs Low-FODMAP Diet

American Journal of Gastroenterology2024

A multicenter randomized trial found that both personalized diet and low-FODMAP improved IBS outcomes, with the personalized approach showing significant symptom, quality-of-life, and microbiome diversity improvements.

Included 121 IBS patients across multiple centers.
Compared personalized microbiome-based nutrition with low-FODMAP.
Reported significant improvements in IBS severity and quality of life.

Why it matters

This study helps support the broader idea that microbiome-informed nutrition may improve digestive symptoms and patient experience in a more personalized way.

These summaries are provided for educational purposes and are meant to help readers navigate the research more easily. They do not replace medical advice or individualized care.