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"Micronutrients"

Research Note

Micronutrient deficiencies are a major public health concern in low- and middle-income countries, where conventional supplementation and fortification programs are often limited by low bioavailability, fragile supply chains, cultural resistance, and poor long-term adherence. This research note proposes a food-based alternative model that leverages selected traditional Korean foods (K-foods)— gim (dried seaweed), kimchi (fermented vegetables), and cheonggukjang (fermented soybean paste)—as culturally adaptable and nutritionally dense components of official development assistance nutrition strategies. These foods provide functionally relevant nutrients, such as iodine, vitamin K2, probiotics, and fermentation-derived bioactive peptides, and offer benefits, including shelf stability, microbial resilience, and decentralized production. Employing a multidisciplinary clinical nutrition framework integrating food composition science, fermentation biology, public health nutrition, and development policy, this note presents a five-step research roadmap encompassing nutrient profiling, safety and stability assessment, cultural acceptability evaluation, community-based efficacy trials, and policy translation. By prioritizing food-based, multinutrient dietary interventions over single-nutrient strategies, the proposed model highlights a scalable and clinically relevant pathway for enhancing micronutrient status in resource-limited settings. This work contributes to emerging discussions on nutrition-sensitive official development assistance and highlights K-foods as potential tools for sustainable, culturally responsive global nutrition interventions.
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Original Article
Association Between the Risk of Multiple Sclerosis and Dietary Proinflammatory/Anti-Inflammatory Food Intake and Dietary Diversity: A Case-Control Study
Alireza Hatami, Maryam Ahmadi-khorram, Fatemeh Keykhaei, Ali Jafarzadeh Esfehani, Mohsen Nematy
Clin Nutr Res 2024;13(1):61-73.   Published online February 1, 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.7762/cnr.2024.13.1.61

A diet rich in proinflammatory components and inflammation are suggested to be significant risk factors for multiple sclerosis (MS). This study aimed to investigate the association between the risk of MS and the inflammatory potential of an individual’s diet and dietary diversity through pro-inflammatory/anti-inflammatory food intake score (PAIFIS) and dietary diversity score (DDS). In a hospital-based case–control study, 397 participants, including 197 patients with MS and 200 healthy participants aged over 18 years, were evaluated. The history of smoking, dietary intake, and anthropometric characteristics, including body mass index, waist circumference, total body fat, and fat-free mass were assessed. A validated 160-item semiquantitative food frequency questionnaire was used to calculate the PAIFIS and DDS scores. The mean age of the participants was 32.45 ± 8.66 years, and most were females (274, 79.4%). The PAIFIS score was significantly higher among MS patients than healthy participants (p = 0.001). Between PAIFIS and DDS, only PAFIS was significantly related to MS risk (odds ratio, 1.002; 95% confidence interval, 1.001–1.004; p = 0.001). PAIFIS, as an index of dietary inflammation, can predict MS. Further studies are needed to document these findings.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Linking Nutrients to Multiple Sclerosis Pathogenesis: Biological Evidence and Clinical Implications
    Rachele Rosso, Alessandro Maglione, Matteo Bronzini, Eleonora Virgilio, Marinella Clerico, Simona Rolla
    Nutrients.2025; 17(21): 3414.     CrossRef
  • Immune response against Epstein-Barr virus as an etiologic factor and therapeutic target for multiple sclerosis
    V. S. Rogovskii, A. D. Kukushkina, A. N. Boyko
    Extreme Medicine.2025; 27(1): 43.     CrossRef
  • Dietary acid load as well as dietary phytochemical index, and association with multiple sclerosis: results from a case–control study
    Alireza Hatami, Maryam Ahmadi-Khorram, Fatemeh Keykhaei, Mohtaram Hashemi, Reihane Javid, Mehrara Hashempour, Ali Jafarzadeh Esfehani, Mohsen Nematy
    BMC Nutrition.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
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