Microorganisms (Jul 2023)

Ramen Consumption and Gut Microbiota Diversity in Japanese Women: Cross-Sectional Data from the NEXIS Cohort Study

  • Jonguk Park,
  • Hiroto Bushita,
  • Ayatake Nakano,
  • Ai Hara,
  • Hiroshi M. Ueno,
  • Naoki Ozato,
  • Koji Hosomi,
  • Hitoshi Kawashima,
  • Yi-An Chen,
  • Attayeb Mohsen,
  • Harumi Ohno,
  • Kana Konishi,
  • Kumpei Tanisawa,
  • Hinako Nanri,
  • Haruka Murakami,
  • Motohiko Miyachi,
  • Jun Kunisawa,
  • Kenji Mizuguchi,
  • Michihiro Araki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11081892
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. 1892

Abstract

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A cross-sectional study involving 224 healthy Japanese adult females explored the relationship between ramen intake, gut microbiota diversity, and blood biochemistry. Using a stepwise regression model, ramen intake was inversely associated with gut microbiome alpha diversity after adjusting for related factors, including diets, Age, BMI, and stool habits (β = −0.018; r = −0.15 for Shannon index). The intake group of ramen was inversely associated with dietary nutrients and dietary fiber compared with the no-intake group of ramen. Sugar intake, Dorea as a short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing gut microbiota, and γ-glutamyl transferase as a liver function marker were directly associated with ramen intake after adjustment for related factors including diets, gut microbiota, and blood chemistry using a stepwise logistic regression model, whereas Dorea is inconsistently less abundant in the ramen group. In conclusion, the increased ramen was associated with decreased gut bacterial diversity accompanying a perturbation of Dorea through the dietary nutrients, gut microbiota, and blood chemistry, while the methodological limitations existed in a cross-sectional study. People with frequent ramen eating habits need to take measures to consume various nutrients to maintain and improve their health, and dietary management can be applied to the dietary feature in ramen consumption.

Keywords