Tried keto, vegan, or intermittent fasting—without success?
You followed the rules, cut the carbs, counted the macros, maybe even joined a community for motivation. And yet, the results weren’t what you expected. You felt tired, bloated, or didn’t lose the weight others did. You’re not failing the diet. The diet is failing you—because it’s not designed for your body.
Welcome to the power of nutrigenomics—the science of how your genes affect your response to food.
Just as we all have different eye colors, we also have different genes that influence how our bodies process nutrients. These differences explain why some people thrive on a high-protein keto diet while others feel sluggish, or why your friend loses weight on a vegan diet and you don’t.
Here are a few examples:
- Individuals with the PPARG gene variant often benefit more from low-fat diets due to how their cells store and respond to fat.
- People with variations in the APOA2 gene may gain more weight when consuming saturated fats, making high-fat diets less ideal.
- Others with FABP2 or FTO gene variants may be predisposed to insulin resistance or slower fat metabolism, affecting how they respond to carbohydrate-rich diets.
The takeaway? One-size-fits-all diets ignore your biology.
Instead of guessing which plan works, nutrigenomic testing offers a personalized roadmap based on your DNA—helping you understand:
- Which types of fats and carbs your body handles best
- Whether you’re more sensitive to sugar or saturated fats
- How your genes influence hunger, satiety, and food cravings
- If your metabolism is naturally slower or more adaptive
Armed with this information, you can fine-tune your eating habits to match your genetic blueprint—whether your goal is weight loss, muscle gain, improved energy, or better long-term health.
No more diet roulette. No more frustration. Just science-backed, personalized nutrition.
With the SuperDNA Nutrigenomics test, you’ll gain the insights you need to eat smarter, feel better, and live healthier—starting with your genes.