Sexual dimorphism in the context of nutrition and health

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Abstract

Diets and dietary constituents that we consume have a considerable impact on disease risk. Intriguingly these effects may be modulated to some extent by sex. Lack of female representation in nutritional studies as well as a lack of stratification by sex has and continues to limit our understanding of these sex × diet interactions. Here we provide an overview of the current and available literature describing how exposure to certain dietary patterns (Western-style diet, Mediterranean diet, vegetarian/vegan, ketogenic diet) and dietary constituents (dietary fibre, PUFA and plant bioactive) influences disease risk in a sex-specific manner. Interestingly, these sex differences appear to be highly disease-specific. The identification of such sex differences in response to diet stresses the importance of sex stratification in nutritional research.

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Pontifex, M. G., Vauzour, D., & Muller, M. (2024). Sexual dimorphism in the context of nutrition and health. In Proceedings of the Nutrition Society (Vol. 83, pp. 109–119). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0029665123003610

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