Infographic: Deciphering Diet from Blood and Urine Samples

Nutrition researchers are beginning to use metabolomics to determine how healthy subjects’ diets are, and even to reveal specific properties of the foods they eat.

Written byAmber Dance
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To achieve greater objectivity in nutrition research, which has historically relied on self-reports of what subjects eat, scientists are turning to biomarkers in bodily fluids that reveal details about a person’s diet. Much of the work to this point has involved screens to identify novel markers for specific food items (or even for how those foods are prepared). In some cases, researchers have begun to use markers identified in these screens to correlate diet with health risks.

In some studies that aim to identify metabolites associated with certain foods or diets, scientists tightly control people’s intakes before analyzing their metabolites. More often, they ask subjects what they’ve been eating. People’s bodies will contain molecules from the foods they eat, as well as metabolites made from or in response to those foods, and even metabolites from their microbiota.

Most studies sample blood or urine, but stool, hair, or fingernails ...

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Meet the Author

  • Amber Dance is an award-winning freelance science journalist based in Southern California. After earning a doctorate in biology, she re-trained in journalism as a way to engage her broad interest in science and share her enthusiasm with readers. She mainly writes about life sciences, but enjoys getting out of her comfort zone on occasion.

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