How do you know if you're getting enough choline, a nutrient that helps your liver and brain? Right now, it's hard to measure. A new study took a close look at whether a simple blood test could be the answer.
In a tightly controlled feeding experiment, healthy adults ate diets with different amounts of choline. The researchers found that when people ate a diet with only a quarter of the recommended choline, their blood levels of choline and a related nutrient called betaine dropped significantly. The combination of these two markers was particularly good at telling the low-choline diet apart from a full-choline diet. The study also used a special liver scan and found that a subset of people showed signs of increased liver fat when they ate very little choline, though this response varied a lot from person to person.
This research was done in a lab-like setting where every meal was provided, which is very different from real life. The findings show a clear link between what people ate and what showed up in their blood, suggesting a cause-and-effect relationship. However, the liver fat finding was inconsistent and only seen in some people. This work points to a promising way to assess choline status more accurately, but it's still early research.