this post was submitted on 15 Mar 2026
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Can AI tools make meal plans that help us lose weight the right way? In a new study, a team of researchers compared AI’s meal planning abilities to those of a dietician. The results showed that AI-made meal plans – when compared to dietician plans – severely undercalculated the needed amount of calories and macronutrients like carbs and overemphasized other macronutrients like proteins and lipids. The team cautioned that teens should not solely rely on AI to make meal plans for weight loss, saying that the consistent deviation of five different AI models from nutritional guidelines recommended by health organizations could have negative effects on growing bodies.

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[–] fallaciousBasis@lemmy.world 1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Actually.... High protein diets can cause de novo kidney disease. De novo means it's causal, from the new. Out of nowhere! Not even with pre-existing conditions, although if you have those pre-existing conditions then this applies even more.

I'm not aware of any direct links to kidney disease from dietary fat. But extremely high protein has strong causal links to de novo (along with comorbidities) kidney disease.

[–] xep@discuss.online 3 points 6 days ago (1 children)

High protein diets can cause de novo kidney disease

I'm not suggesting that you overdose on protein, if you're referring to rabbit starvation. If you aren't, would you care to provide more information?

[–] fallaciousBasis@lemmy.world 0 points 2 days ago

Here's my thoughts.

Hyperfiltration exhausts (overworks, think of it like high blood pressure?) the kidneys.

This causes acceleration and perhaps inducing(de novo) disease.

I know the evidence is quite weak. But there's so many studies that show it's making it worse for people with even minor kidney impairment and it just gets worse as it gets worse showing an accelerated momentum effect.