Overview
Diet therapy is the use of planned, modified, or therapeutic diets as a deliberate intervention to maintain health, manage disease, or correct nutritional imbalances. It involves adjusting the composition, quantity, timing, or type of food and nutrients to meet defined clinical goals, such as controlling body weight, blood glucose, or lipid levels, supporting recovery, or relieving symptoms of a specific disorder. Diet therapy is individualized to the patient and is frequently used in conditions including obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and gastrointestinal disorders. Research in the International Journal of Nutrition reflects this applied focus: a brief report described the implementation of an elemental diet in children with autism spectrum disorder presenting with gastrointestinal disease, a study on the hypocaloric Mediterranean diet examined factors predictive of completion in overweight patients, and work on Solanum aethiopicum explored its beneficial impact on diabetes control. These studies illustrate how structured dietary regimens are designed, applied, and evaluated for particular health conditions. This page gathers peer-reviewed, open-access research relevant to diet therapy and the use of dietary modification to prevent and manage disease.
Research published in this journal
11 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Beneficial Impacts of Solanum aethiopicum L. in Diabetes Control
Efficacy of a Hypocaloric Mediterranean Diet in Overweight Patients: Factors Predictive of Completion
Analysis of Effects of Kale Powder Consumption among Subjects with Potential Metabolic Syndrome: A Prospective Single-Arm Clinical Study
How Knowledge on Microbiota may be Helpful to Establish an Optimal Diet for Health Maintenance
Molecular Analysis of 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin Synthase Gene in Atypical Phenylketonuric Egyptian Patients
Epigenetics and Nutrition
Comparative Study of Hypolipidemic Effects of Momordica Charantia (Karela) with Atorvastatin in Fat Fed Rats
Does a Controlled Diet Improve Cellulite?
Pilot Study: Impact of a Gluten-Free Diet on Symptoms and Severity of Fibromyalgia
Adopting High Fat Diets for Fat Loss and Improving Brain Health.
How this research is being cited
The 11 articles above have been cited 30 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2025 · RCMOS - Revista Científica Multidisciplinar O Saber
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2025 · RCMOS - Revista Científica Multidisciplinar O Saber
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2024 · Ageing Research Reviews
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2024 · Frontiers in Nutrition
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2024 · BIO Web of Conferences
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2024 · Nutrients
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2024 · Nutrients
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2024 · BIO Web of Conferences
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Diet Therapy, linking to each citing work.