Research suggests that the available studies linked here do not directly examine seeds as an intervention for blood sugar regulation. The five studies cover topics including dietary bioactives and gut microbiome function, tooth development gene expression in rodents, adherence to a planetary health diet and cardiovascular outcomes, SARS-CoV-2 cellular reprogramming, and bacterial attachment to plant roots — none of which specifically investigate seeds or glycemic outcomes. While one large prospective European cohort study does suggest that broadly plant-forward dietary patterns may be associated with reduced cardiometabolic risk, this finding relates to overall dietary patterns rather than seeds in isolation and does not directly address blood sugar regulation. As a result, the current body of linked evidence does not allow for any meaningful synthesis regarding the use of seeds for blood sugar regulation, and readers seeking that information would need to consult studies specifically designed to test that question.
Citations from PubMed and preprint sources. Match score (0-100) reflects automated search ranking, not clinical appraisal.
| Title | Type | Year | Direction | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dietary bioactives increase gut microbiome diversity and alter host and micro... | Other | 2025 | Neutral | 90 |
| Inverse hourglass pattern of conservation in rodent molar development | Other | 2025 | Neutral | 85 |
| The EAT-Lancet Planetary Health Diet: Impact on Cardiovascular Disease and th... | Other | 2024 | Neutral | 85 |
| ROS/RNS balancing, aerobic fermentation regulation and cell cycle control – a... | Other | 2021 | Neutral | 80 |
| Factors governing attachment of<i>Rhizobium leguminosarum</i>to legume roots | Other | 2022 | Neutral | 75 |