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Molecular Nutrition Intelligence

The molecular nutrition intelligence platform.

Scan a food. Decode a supplement. Understand ingredients, excipients, contaminants, delivery systems and claims — from chemistry to evidence to regulatory context. No hype, no disease claims, no influencer science.

Molecular nutrition
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Cited Knowledge Base facts
each with a source
0
U.S. patents
founder
0
Books
2026
0
Analytical engines
one platform
Three pillars

Learn. Analyze. Discover.

One platform, three ways in — the encyclopedia, the toolkit and the professional terminal.

Atlas · Learn

NutrIndx Atlas™

The searchable science library — nutrients, botanicals, excipients, contaminants, delivery systems and the evidence behind them.

Enter the Atlas →
Lab · Analyze

NutrIndx Lab™

Interactive calculators, comparators, simulators and label tools — transparent, source-shown calculations alongside clearly-labeled illustrative models.

Open the Lab →
Terminal · Discover

NutrIndx Terminal™

Professional and investor-grade intelligence — ingredient genome, evidence decay, pipelines and trends.

Open the Terminal →
Find your way

Explore the platform

Tap a card or use the tabs above.

Evidence

Science

Six research desks and cited charts.

Engines

Tools

Twelve analytical engines, two interactive now.

Reference

Knowledge

200 sourced facts, searchable.

Product

The App

How the educational score is calculated.

Pricing

Plans

Free, Pro and Pro+.

Foundations

Engineering

Chemical engineering × nutrition.

Live

Today

Clock, weather and date.

Store

Shop

The books and what’s coming.

Built by an engineer

Credibility you can check

Founder

Amirhossein Mehrkesh, PhD

Chemical engineer; 4 U.S. patents; R&D leadership across a ~$300M portfolio; 20+ staff; >35% development cycle-time reduction via ML and digital twins.

Read the full bio →
Method

Numbers are source-labeled

Scientific values are source-labeled; educational models, estimates and illustrative calculations are clearly identified. No invented statistics.

See the knowledge base →
Honest

Educational, not medical

The tools help you understand and compare. They do not diagnose, treat or replace your clinician.

Coming soon

The NutrIndx app

Scan a food, view a transparent score, and compare products using published criteria.

The Science

Six research desks, on the record

Figures are linked to cited literature sources. Evidence-strength labelled.

Carbon cost of protein

kg CO₂e per 100 g protein (global mean)
Poore & Nemecek, Science 2018. Beef shown = beef herd; cross-system mean ≈25, range 9–105 kg CO₂e/100 g protein.

Ultra-processed overeating

Matched-menu intake (kcal/day)
Hall et al., Cell Metab 2019.

Glycemic spectrum

Glycemic index (glucose = 100)
Atkinson et al. 2008/2021.

Thermic effect of macronutrients

% of calories burned digesting
Westerterp 2004.
The Platform

Dashboards & user-adjusted indices

Enter a few inputs for a transparent four-axis profile. Educational — not medical advice.

NUTRINDX ENGINE v1.0 · TRANSPARENT-HEURISTIC MODE · computed in your browser
Composite NutrIndx · 0–100 · model & method
Enter inputs and compute to generate your profile.
Educational demonstration on published heuristics. Not a diagnosis or medical advice.
Bioavailability dashboard

An evidence-informed view of absorption

Live, cited charts showing how chemical form and food matrix change absorption. The full digestive-system exhibit lives on the Atlas page.

Data Lab

Premium analytics on real data

Interactive 3D and statistical views built only from peer-reviewed datasets — the source is shown on each.

Glycemic load — 3D surface

Glycemic load = glycemic index × carbohydrate (g) ÷ 100
Definition: Salmerón et al., JAMA 1997; GI values: Atkinson et al. 2008/2021.

Protein footprint — regression & clustering

GHG vs land use per 100 g protein · least-squares fit + k-means (k=3)
Data: Poore & Nemecek, Science 2018 (global means). OLS & k-means computed in your browser.

Level, velocity & acceleration

A blood-sugar curve and its 1st & 2nd derivatives — illustrative
Methodology demo: numerical derivatives of a postprandial-style curve. Real responses vary by person (Berry et al. 2020).
Open the NutrIndx Atlas →
Coming soon · join the waitlist

Point your phone at a food.
Get a transparent nutrition score.

The NutrIndx app turns the science on this site into one educational score you can compare in the aisle — a transparent 0–100 nutrition score with the reasons and sources behind it. No hype, no hidden algorithm.

Join the waitlist →
NutrIndx app
How it works

Scan → analyze → compare

Three steps, fully transparent — you can see exactly why a food scored the way it did.

Step 1

Scan or search

Scan a barcode or search a food. NutrIndx reads the ingredient list and nutrition panel — including the additives most apps ignore.

Step 2

See the score

A 0–100 score across four axes — bioavailability, processing, metabolic and sustainability — each built on published, cited criteria you can open and read.

Step 3

Swap up

Compare products with different NutrIndx profiles and ingredient characteristics, on the same shelf — so the science turns into a choice you can make in ten seconds.

Methodology and scoring framework

Four axes, major scoring inputs shown

The same engine you can try now on the Platform tab. Transparent methodology with source-linked inputs and assumptions.

Bioavailability

Absorption & utilization profile

Incorporates published differences in absorption and utilization among ingredient forms and food matrices — e.g. soluble mineral salts vs poorly-absorbed oxides.

Firoz & Graber 2001; Shoba 1998
Processing

Processing & Additive Profile

Reflects ultra-processing (NOVA) and regulator-flagged additives, from emulsifiers to E171 — a transparency view, not a clean/dirty verdict.

NOVA; Hall 2019; EFSA
Metabolic

Expected metabolic context

Glycemic load, fiber, protein quality and the thermic effect of food, combined into one educational model axis. See Methodology.

Atkinson 2008; Westerterp 2004
Sustainability

What’s the footprint?

Life-cycle greenhouse-gas and land use per gram of protein, from the largest food meta-analysis to date.

Poore & Nemecek 2018
Why it’s different

Built by an engineer, sourced to the studies

Transparent

Transparent methodology

Scores display inputs, assumptions, methodology and cited references where available. Most apps give a grade and hide the math; NutrIndx shows it.

Molecular

Beyond calories

It judges form, absorption and additives — the chemistry of food — not just calorie and macro numbers.

Honest

Educational, not medical

It helps you make more informed choices; it does not diagnose, treat or replace your clinician. We say so plainly.

Be first in line

Join the NutrIndx waitlist

Early access, founding-member pricing, and the research behind each score.

NutrIndx is an educational tool in development. Scores are built on published, transparent criteria and are not a medical device, diagnosis, or treatment. Nothing here has been evaluated by the FDA. The waitlist form is a demonstration and does not transmit or store data.
Plans

Simple, transparent pricing

Start free. Upgrade for the full score breakdown, unlimited use, trend analytics and the complete Knowledge Base. Cancel anytime.

Compare

What’s in each plan

FeatureFreeProPro+Enterprise
Encyclopedia & AtlasBasicsFullFullFull
Scans per day3UnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Knowledge Base200 facts200+ & advanced search200+ & search200+ & search
Custom dashboard & saved products
Sweetener / glycemic / processing tools
Ingredient Genome & Evidence Decay
COA scanner & contaminant tools
Formulation tools & batch compare
Exportable reports
Opportunity pipeline & trackers
Formulation Moat & market trends
Custom reports & team seats
NutrIndx is an educational product. Scores and tools are built on published, transparent criteria and are not a medical device and do not diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Nothing here has been evaluated by the FDA. Checkout is a demonstration — no payment is processed and no data is stored; live payments would connect to a processor such as Stripe when hosted.
Analytical Engines

Twelve tools, every score in the open

The instruments behind NutrIndx — scoring, bioavailability, glycemic and trend engines. Tap any card to see the method and its source. Some run live now; others are honest demos or in development.

Try it

Two engines you can run right now

Glycemic Load — quick calc

Glycemic load = GI × carbohydrate ÷ 100
Salmerón et al., JAMA 1997; Atkinson et al. 2008. Low ≤ 10 · Medium 11–19 · High ≥ 20.

Supplement Form Comparator

How form changes absorption
Educational tools built on published criteria. Not medical advice; not a diagnosis or treatment. Demos are illustrative of method, not personalized results.
Botanical Center of Excellence

From plant to defensible product

How botanicals are studied, extracted, regulated and turned into quality products — written plainly and sourced. Tap a category for detail and citations. Evidence for most botanicals is preliminary; we say so.

Educational information only. Statements about botanicals are not medical advice and have not been evaluated by the FDA; these products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent disease.
Investment Pipeline

2026–2030 novel-ingredient opportunities

A scientist’s view of where functional ingredients are heading — each with its thesis, unmet need, bioavailability challenge, regulatory risk, formulation moat, market note and an honestly-labeled evidence strength. Tap for the full thesis.

For investors & partners

Request the diligence brief

A deeper, sourced look at the pipeline and the science behind each thesis.

Evidence strength is labeled per ingredient. Market statements are qualitative pending sourced data. This is educational and strategic information, not investment, medical or legal advice, and is not an offer of securities.
Nutrition Calculator

Your user-adjusted NutrIndx (educational estimate)

A transparent 0–100 score across four cited axes. The full interactive calculator — gauges and radar — lives on the Platform; fast single-purpose tools live under Tools.

Bioavailability

Bioavailability-informed estimate

Form and food matrix — soluble salts, D3 vs D2, curcumin pairing.

Firoz & Graber 2001; Tripkovic 2012
Processing

How processed

NOVA ultra-processing and regulator-flagged additives.

NOVA; Hall 2019; EFSA
Metabolic

Expected metabolic context

Glycemic load, fiber, protein quality and thermic effect, combined as one educational model axis.

Atkinson 2008; Westerterp 2004
Educational only. Not medical advice; does not diagnose, treat or prevent disease.
Indices & Models PRO

The models lab

Interactive, transparent calculators — where a tool uses published constants the source is shown; illustrative models are labeled as such. Educational tools, not medical advice. See the Methodology page.

Pro model

Protein Target

Daily protein range for your weight and goal.
NASEM Dietary Reference Intakes; ISSN position stand, 2017.
Pro model

Hydration Target

Total water intake reference (food + drink).
Institute of Medicine, DRIs for Water, 2004.
Pro model

Added-Sugar Budget

Free-sugar limits from your daily energy intake.
WHO Guideline: Sugars intake, 2015.
Pro model

Sodium : Potassium Meter

Your intake against WHO targets, plus the Na:K ratio.
WHO guidance on sodium and potassium, 2013.
Pro model

Fiber Gap

How far your intake is from the daily target.
NASEM Dietary Reference Intakes (~14 g / 1000 kcal).
Pro model

Metabolic Energy & TEF

Gross energy, thermic effect of food, and net available energy.
Atwater factors; Westerterp, Nutr Metab 2004 (TEF: carb ~8%, protein ~25%, fat ~2%).
Pro model

Caffeine Clearance

First-order decay at a ~5-hour half-life.
Population half-life ~5 h (range varies with genetics, smoking, pregnancy).
Educational only. These models illustrate published relationships and individual values; they do not diagnose, treat or replace professional advice.
Ingredient Genome PRO

Six fingerprints for any ingredient

Compare ingredients — not products — across bioavailability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, mechanism, evidence and regulatory status.

Each fingerprint is a 0–100 NutrIndx evidence-weighted index — a transparent editorial rating of the published literature, not a laboratory measurement of your body. Ratings and sources are shown so you can judge for yourself. These are evidence-weighted editorial indices — not laboratory measurements or clinical predictions. See the Methodology page.

Fingerprint radar

Indices are evidence-weighted editorial ratings; see the basis at right.

Educational comparison of published evidence. Not medical advice; does not diagnose, treat or recommend use.
Nutritional Reality Check PRO

Marketing claims vs evidence

Pick a sample product category and see how its typical claims hold up — strongly supported, weak/mixed, or unsupported.

Demo using sample product categories, not real brands. Ratings reflect the general strength of evidence for each type of claim, with sources. A hosted version reads a real label (OCR) and checks each claim against a citations database. It is educational and is not a verdict on any specific product.
Educational illustration only. Claim ratings are general and do not assess any specific brand or product.
Nutritional Terminal PRO

The ingredient intelligence desk

One screen for what the science of nutrition is doing right now — emerging ingredients, research momentum, and how the evidence behind each one is changing.

Illustrative sample data for demonstration. The hosted Terminal pulls live counts from PubMed (NCBI E-utilities), ClinicalTrials.gov and USPTO PatentsView — all free APIs — through a caching backend. Figures shown here are sample trajectories, not live telemetry. For investors, formulators and educators; not investment or medical advice.
42
Ingredients tracked
sample watchlist
3.1k
Publications (12 mo)
sample
186
Active trials
sample
74
Patents filed (12 mo)
sample
Discovery Radar

Emerging ingredients, 2026–2030

Research momentum vs clinical momentum; bubble size reflects patent activity. Sample data.

Momentum map

Sample momentum scores; live version computed from PubMed / ClinicalTrials.gov / USPTO.

Watchlist

Trend = sample 12-month change in research activity.
Evidence Decay Engine

How the science changes

Enthusiasm and evidence don’t always move together. Pick an ingredient to see its sample publication trajectory and how settled the evidence is.

Research activity over time

Sample publications per year.

Educational market and science-trend tool. Sample data shown; not investment, financial, or medical advice.
Models & Simulators PRO

Play with the physiology

Three interactive, transparent models. Move the inputs and watch the curves respond.

Educational models, not personal predictions. These illustrate the typical shape of physiological and intake responses described in textbooks and reference values — they don’t use your labs, medications or genetics, and they don’t diagnose, predict or measure anything about your body.
Human Metabolism Simulator

One meal, four curves

Adjust a meal and see illustrative blood-glucose, insulin, satiety and energy responses over three hours.

The meal

Carbs60g
Protein20g
Fat15g
Fiber6g
Illustrative model: fiber and fat/protein slow and flatten the glucose rise; protein and fiber extend satiety.

Blood glucose (illustrative)

Insulin, satiety & energy (index)

Digital Nutrition Twin

Your day vs the references

Enter a day’s intake; the model compares each against published reference intakes. Educational — no labs or medications involved.

A day of intake

Protein70g
Fiber20g
Sodium3000mg
Potassium2800mg
Water1800ml
Added sugar60g
Vitamin D400IU
References: protein 56 g, fiber 30 g, sodium <2000 mg, potassium 3500 mg, water 2700 ml, added sugar <50 g, vitamin D 600 IU (general adult references).

Intake profile

Green = near/at a healthy reference; amber = off; red = over a limit or well short. Educational only.
Nutritional Scenario Explorer

What-if, not forecast

See how a modeled nutrient reserve drifts over six months if intake stays low, meets the reference, or exceeds it. A generic scenario — not a prediction about you.

Scenario

Current intake70% of reference
The reserve index is an abstract 0–100 modeling device, not a blood level. It shows direction, not a personal value.

Modeled reserve index (illustrative)

All three are educational models with illustrative outputs. They do not diagnose, treat, predict or measure any individual’s health.
NutrIndx Atlas™ · Learn

The molecular nutrition library

Understand what ingredients are, how they’re absorbed, formulated and tested, what a label can and can’t legally claim, and where the evidence is strong, weak or incomplete.

Educational model. Not diagnostic. Not medical advice. Not a treatment recommendation. Not a substitute for a qualified clinician.
Transparency

Methodology & Sources

How the scores are built, every data source, the claims policy, and live-vs-sample data.

Open →
Safety data

Contaminant Intelligence

Solvent classes, heavy-metal limits, mycotoxin action levels and pesticide categories — each sourced.

Open →
Chemistry

Botanical Molecule Atlas

Twenty molecule families — chemistry, extraction and delivery, in plain language.

Open →
Guides

Atlas Guides

Processing, standardization, claims, shelf-life and delivery — decoded.

Open →
Library

Nutrient Library

35 nutrients with sourced reference intakes (RDA/AI), upper limits, roles and forms.

Open →
Atlas

Excipient Atlas

What emulsifiers, fillers, preservatives and sweeteners actually do.

Open →
Reference

Knowledge Base

200 cited, plain-language facts across 18 categories — searchable and filterable.

Open →
Evidence

Science Desks

Research desks and cited, interactive charts on the science behind nutrition.

Open →
Chemistry

Botanical Center

Botanical molecule families — chemistry, extraction, evidence and safety flags.

Open →
Decode

Label Screening

How to read an ingredient list — ultra-processing and additive transparency.

Open →
Process

Engineering

A process-engineering view of food and formulation.

Open →
Read

Library

Two books, original white papers and plain-English explainers.

Open →
Exhibit

Body Atlas

An interactive, organ-by-organ map of where nutrients are absorbed, used and stored.

Open ↗
Atlas · Nutrient Intelligence Library

Every major nutrient, sourced

Reference intakes (RDA/AI) and safe upper limits (UL) for U.S. adults 19–50, from the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and the National Academies. Tap a card for detail.

Educational reference only. Reference intakes are population values for healthy adults; they are not personal recommendations, diagnoses, or treatment advice. Pregnancy, lactation, age 51+, and medical conditions change these numbers.
Atlas · Excipient Atlas

What the “other ingredients” do

The emulsifiers, texturizers, fillers, flow agents, coatings, preservatives and sweeteners on labels — why each one is there, in plain language.

Educational only. Listing an additive is not a safety verdict; regulatory status varies by country, and dose and context matter. Not medical advice.
Atlas · Botanical Molecule Atlas

The chemistry of botanicals

The molecule families behind herbs and botanicals — their chemistry, how they’re extracted, and what to know about delivery. Educational chemistry, not usage advice.

Educational chemistry reference. Describes molecule classes and properties; it is not a recommendation to use any botanical, and makes no disease claims. "Steroid-like" classes here (phytosterols, steroidal saponins, withanolides) are natural-product chemistry — not anabolic steroids. The FDA warns that some products sold as supplements have been found tainted with undeclared drugs.
Atlas · Guides

How to read the label — honestly

Five plain-English guides to the parts of nutrition that marketing usually blurs.

Processing & Additive Intelligence

Processing & additives, decoded

Guide

Clean ≠ safer

Synthetic is not automatically worse and natural is not automatically better. What matters is dose, function, purity, evidence and exposure — not the vibe of the word.

Guide

Why preservatives exist

They prevent mold, bacteria and rancidity. Removing them can shorten shelf life and, in some foods, raise real microbial risk.

Guide

Why emulsifiers exist

They keep oil and water from separating so a product stays smooth and stable — a physical job, not a nutritional one.

Guide

Why fillers and flow agents exist

Fillers make a tiny active dose into a usable tablet; flow agents (like magnesium stearate) keep powders from jamming machinery. Both are used in small amounts for technical function.

Guide

When stripping additives backfires

Dropping preservatives or stabilizers can mean shorter shelf life, separation, or higher spoilage risk — a real trade-off, not a free win.

Guide

"Sugar-free" ≠ calorie-free

Sugar-free foods often use sugar alcohols (which carry some calories and can cause GI upset) or more starch/maltodextrin instead.

Standardization

What "standardized" really means

Guide

"Standardized extract"

Means the extract is adjusted to a fixed percentage of a chosen compound, so each dose delivers a predictable amount.

Guide

Marker vs active

A marker compound is measured for consistency; it is not always the compound responsible for the effect. The two can differ.

Guide

Extract ratio (DER) vs active content

A 10:1 ratio describes how much raw herb was concentrated — it does not by itself tell you the active content. Look for both.

Guide

Full-spectrum vs standardized

Full-spectrum keeps the plant’s natural mix; standardized targets a set level of one compound. Different goals, different trade-offs.

Guide

Reading a COA

A real certificate of analysis confirms identity, potency and contaminant limits (heavy metals, solvents, pesticides, microbes) for a specific batch — not a generic marketing sheet.

Claims

Structure/function vs disease

Guide

Structure/function is allowed

Supplements may describe a nutrient’s role in normal body structure or function, when properly substantiated — with the FDA disclaimer.

Guide

Disease claims are not

Saying a product treats, prevents, cures or reduces the risk of a disease turns it into an unapproved drug claim.

Guide

Implied claims count too

Testimonials, before/after images and even charts can create an implied disease claim — the FTC looks at the net impression, not just the words.

Example rewrite

From risky to compliant

Unsafe: “Reduces inflammation and prevents joint pain.”
Safer: “Provides botanical compounds studied for their role in normal oxidative-stress and inflammatory-response pathways. Educational information only.”

Educational model. Not diagnostic. Not medical advice. Not a treatment recommendation. Not a substitute for a qualified clinician.
Shelf-Life & Stability

Why products expire

Guide

Expiration vs "best by"

"Best by" usually means peak quality, not safety. Actives, however, can lose potency over time — which is what a real expiration date protects.

Guide

How things degrade

Oxidation, hydrolysis (water), heat, light and pH drift slowly break actives down. Antioxidants and good packaging slow this.

Guide

Water activity

Low available-water (water activity) starves microbes — the reason dry powders, honey and jams resist spoilage.

Guide

Packaging matters

Amber glass blocks light; nitrogen flushing and desiccants cut oxygen and moisture; barrier films protect sensitive actives.

Guide

Real-time vs accelerated

Stability is tested both in real time and under heat/humidity stress to predict shelf life before it is reached.

Delivery Systems

How an ingredient gets in

Guide

Capsules & tablets

Versatile and stable; tablets hold the most but need binders; capsules dissolve fast and hide taste.

Guide

Softgels

Great for oils and fat-soluble actives; protect against oxidation; harder to make additive-free.

Guide

Gummies & chewables

High acceptability, but limited dose, added sugars/sugar alcohols, and more stability challenges.

Guide

Liposomal & emulsions

Carrier systems that can improve delivery of poorly-absorbed actives; more complex and costly to make.

Guide

Sublingual & sprays

Bypass first-pass digestion for certain small molecules; dose and taste limit what fits.

Guide

Powders & sachets

Flexible dosing and fast onset; taste, clumping and stability are the trade-offs.

Educational overview of dosage forms. Format choice depends on the molecule and goal; this is not medical or formulation advice for any individual.
Atlas · Contaminant Intelligence

Limits, classes & how they’re tested

The regulatory limits and classifications behind four contaminant families — residual solvents, elemental impurities, mycotoxins and pesticide residues — with the exact source for each.

Educational regulatory reference. ICH Q3C (solvents) and ICH Q3D / USP (elemental impurities) are pharmaceutical-quality standards, not food law. FDA mycotoxin figures are action / advisory / guidance levels (non-binding). This explains tolerances and categories; it does not determine individual risk, diagnose exposure, or call any specific food unsafe.
Lab · Sweetener Burden Calculator

How close to the ADI?

The Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI) is a safety ceiling set with a large margin — not a target or a health-benefit measure. This shows where an intake sits relative to it.

Educational estimate. ADIs are conservative safety thresholds for lifetime daily intake; being under the ADI is the norm. Not a diagnosis or medical advice.
Example: a 12-oz diet soda contains roughly 180 mg aspartame (varies by brand).
Lab · Formulation

Formulation tools

Two engineering tools: a powder-flow classifier using the standard Carr and Hausner indices, and a delivery-format selector.

Educational engineering tools. General formulation guidance, not product-specific or medical advice.
Powder Flow Calculator

Carr’s Index & Hausner Ratio

Enter bulk and tapped density (same units). Flowability classes follow USP <1174>.

Delivery Format Selector

Which dosage form fits?

Pick the properties of your ingredient and goal; formats are ranked with the reasoning shown.

Lab · Compliance

Claims & quality checks

Two educational auditors: one flags disease-claim risk in marketing language, the other scores how complete a certificate of analysis (COA) is.

Educational tools, not legal advice. A real regulatory or legal review requires a qualified attorney.
Claim Risk Auditor

Structure/function vs disease

Paste a marketing sentence. The tool flags wording that reads as a disease claim and suggests a safer framing.

COA Truth Scanner

Is this a release COA or a marketing COA?

Check off what a certificate of analysis actually includes.

Terminal · Formulation Moat

How defensible is an ingredient?

A structured way to think about why some ingredients are hard to copy. Eight factors, scored 1–5, combined into an illustrative moat index.

Illustrative framework with sample inputs for demonstration — not investment advice, a valuation, or a recommendation to buy, sell or formulate anything.
Terminal · Emerging Ingredient Pipeline

2026–2030 opportunity map

A forward-looking watchlist of ingredient categories, rated on evidence maturity, regulatory path, formulation defensibility and consumer adoption.

Illustrative sample data for demonstration. Directional categories, not forecasts, financial advice, or health claims.
Methodology & Sources

How NutrIndx works — and what it isn’t

NutrIndx is an educational, evidence-informed platform. This page explains how the scores are built, where the numbers come from, what we can and cannot claim, and which features use live data versus clearly-labeled samples.

Educational model. Not diagnostic. Not medical advice. Not a treatment recommendation. Not a substitute for a qualified clinician.
Scores

How the 0–100 scores work

Transparent

What the 0–100 scores are

The NutrIndx Score, Bioavailability, Processing & Additive, Metabolic and Sustainability indices — and the Ingredient Genome, Evidence Decay and Formulation Moat — are transparent educational composites. You can see the inputs behind each one.

Sourced inputs

Where numbers come from

Where a score uses a published constant (a DRI, an ADI, a regulatory limit), that source is shown. Reference intakes are population values for healthy adults, not personal targets.

Honest limits

Where weighting is illustrative

Where a model combines factors whose weighting is not yet clinically validated (Genome, Evidence Decay, Moat), it is an illustrative educational framework — a structured way to compare, not a clinical measurement.

Composite axes

Metabolic & Processing are models

The Metabolic axis combines glycemic load, fiber, protein quality and thermic effect into one 0–100 educational model; the Processing & Additive Transparency axis combines the NOVA classification with additive counts. The underlying concepts are real and cited; collapsing them into a single axis is a disclosed NutrIndx model, not a validated clinical index.

Sources

The data behind the platform

NIH ODS

Vitamins, minerals, botanicals

Reference intakes (RDA/AI), upper limits and safety notes follow the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements fact sheets and the National Academies DRIs.

FDA

Sweeteners & toxic elements

High-intensity sweetener ADIs and regulatory status, and the four toxic elements of concern (arsenic, lead, cadmium, mercury), follow FDA.

EPA & FDA

Pesticides & mycotoxins

Pesticide tolerances follow EPA 40 CFR Part 180 (enforced by FDA/USDA); mycotoxin figures follow FDA action / advisory / guidance levels.

ICH / USP

Pharmaceutical reference only

ICH Q3C (residual solvents) and Q3D / USP (elemental impurities) are pharmaceutical-quality frameworks shown for education — they are not direct food or supplement legal limits.

Claims policy

What we can and cannot say

Allowed

Structure/function

A supplement may describe a nutrient’s role in normal body structure or function when properly substantiated, with the FDA disclaimer.

Restricted

Disease claims

Claims to diagnose, treat, cure, prevent or reduce the risk of a disease are restricted and would require drug approval. NutrIndx does not make them.

FTC

Truthful & substantiated

Any health-related claim — in copy, charts, app outputs or testimonials — must be truthful, not misleading, and backed by competent scientific evidence.

Example rewrite

Avoid: “Reduces inflammation and prevents joint pain.”   Use: “Provides botanical compounds studied for their role in normal inflammatory-response pathways. Educational information only.”

Data status

Live data vs sample data

Live

Weather & time

The Live view uses Open-Meteo with browser geolocation (falling back to Tulsa, OK) and a real-time clock — these are live.

Sample

Terminal & momentum

The Terminal (Discovery Radar, Evidence Decay), Ingredient Genome, Formulation Moat and Emerging Pipeline use clearly-labeled sample/illustrative data. A hosted version connects to PubMed/E-utilities, ClinicalTrials.gov and USPTO PatentsView through a caching backend.

Hosted

Label scanning

Label/barcode scanning in a hosted build would connect to databases such as Open Food Facts and USDA FoodData Central. In this build it is demonstrated, not live.

Until live data connections are in place, every figure that would depend on them is shown as clearly-labeled sample or illustrative data. NutrIndx is educational and evidence-informed; it is not a medical device and nothing here has been evaluated by the FDA.
NutrIndx Lab™ · Analyze

The interactive toolkit

Calculators, comparators, simulators and label tools. Where a tool computes from published values, the source is shown; some tools are clearly-labeled illustrative frameworks. See the Methodology page.

Educational model. Not diagnostic. Not medical advice. Not a treatment recommendation. Not a substitute for a qualified clinician.
Index

User-adjusted Index

A transparent 0–100 nutrition index across four cited axes, with the data lab.

Open →
Calculate

Nutrition Calculator

The four scoring axes explained, plus quick single-purpose tools.

Open →
Models

Indices Lab

Seven live calculators — protein, hydration, sugar, Na:K, fiber, caffeine, energy.

Open →
Compare

Ingredient Genome

Six evidence-weighted fingerprints per ingredient, with A/B compare.

Open →
Audit

Reality Check

Marketing claims vs evidence — strongly supported, weak, or unsupported.

Open →
Simulate

Simulators

Metabolism, the educational Nutrition Twin, and what-if scenarios.

Open →
Engines

Tools & Engines

Twelve analytical engines plus inline glycemic-load and form comparators.

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Calculator

Sweetener Burden

See where an intake sits versus the FDA acceptable daily intake (ADI).

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Formulation

Formulation Lab

Powder-flow (Carr/Hausner) classifier and a delivery-format selector.

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Compliance

Claims & COA

Claim-risk auditor and a COA completeness scanner.

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NutrIndx Terminal™ · Discover

Professional & investor intelligence

For investors, suppliers, brands, manufacturers and R&D teams — ingredient momentum, evidence trajectories and the 2026–2030 opportunity map.

Educational model. Not diagnostic. Not medical advice. Not a treatment recommendation. Not a substitute for a qualified clinician.
Dashboard

Nutritional Terminal

Discovery Radar and the Evidence Decay engine on one screen.

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Pipeline

Investment Pipeline

Six ingredient theses with evidence grade and regulatory path.

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Defensibility

Formulation Moat

An eight-factor view of how hard an ingredient is to copy — technical difficulty, IP, analytics, regulatory and supply risk.

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2026–2030

Emerging Pipeline

A forward map of emerging ingredients by evidence maturity, regulatory path and adoption.

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Label Screening

Read the label like a chemist

Two engines turn an ingredient list into clear, sourced signals: how ultra-processed a product is, and which additives carry regulatory or evidence flags.

Engine

Label Processing & Additive Transparency Index

Describes how processed a product is using the NOVA framework plus the count and type of cosmetic additives — a transparency view, not a clean/dirty verdict. Disclosed as a model. See Methodology.

Monteiro/NOVA; Hall 2019
Engine

Additive Risk Screen

Flags additives by regulatory status so you can decide for yourself — not a safety verdict, a transparency tool.

EFSA; IARC; FDA
Examples

What a flag looks like

Colorant

Titanium dioxide (E171)

Banned from food in the EU (2022) after EFSA could not rule out genotoxicity; still allowed in the US.

EFSA 2021; Reg (EU) 2022/63
Preservative

Nitrite in processed meat

Prevents botulism and fixes color, but processed meat is classified IARC Group 1.

IARC 2015
Antioxidant

BHA

Stops fats going rancid; IARC lists it Group 2B (possibly carcinogenic) from animal data.

IARC Vol. 40
Educational information only; regulatory status changes and varies by country. Not medical advice.
Consulting

R&D, formulation & regulatory strategy.

Chemical-engineering depth applied to functional nutrition — from molecule to market. Educational and strategic services; not medical or legal advice.

R&D
Services

Where I help

Each engagement is scoped and evidence-based.

Consulting inquiry

Tell me what you’re building

A short note and I’ll follow up. Demo form — nothing is sent or stored.

Consulting is educational and strategic; it does not constitute medical, legal or regulatory advice, and any claims must be independently verified with qualified professionals.
Today

Time, calendar & conditions

A live local clock and month view, plus current weather from Open-Meteo (no API key required). Allow location access for local conditions, or it defaults to Tulsa, OK.

Local time
Weather
Loading conditions…
Calendar
Chemical Engineering

The engineering underneath nutrition

What sets NutrIndx apart: a process-engineering view of food and formulation — bioavailability, separation, energy and design.

Knowledge Base

100 things the label won’t tell you

Plain-English, sourced facts on what’s really in your food and supplements — preservatives, emulsifiers, fillers, extraction, contaminants, testing and manufacturing. Search or filter; tap any card for the detail and source.

The Shop

Books & what’s coming

The books are available now; subscriptions live on the Plans tab. Formulations are in development — shown honestly, not for sale yet.

In development

Formulations & ingredients

Imagery of the categories we're building — not yet available for purchase, no products on the market.

Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Nothing here is intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. The storefront is a working demonstration; books are illustrative checkout only and no payment is processed. "In development" items are not available for purchase.
The Founder

Amirhossein Mehrkesh, PhD

Amirhossein Mehrkesh, PhD
Founder · Tulsa, Oklahoma

Executive R&D leader and chemical engineer with 15+ years taking products from molecular concept to commercial scale across botanicals, supplements, functional consumer health and pharmaceutical-grade manufacturing. PhD, University of Colorado.

4U.S. patents · ionic liquids & materials
$300MR&D / CAPEX portfolio governed
20+scientists & engineers led
>35%cycle-time cut via ML & digital twins