Abstract

Chronic low-grade, systemic inflammation is a well-characterized risk factor in the development of chronic metabolic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic syndrome. Diet could be an effective strategy for reducing inflammation associated with chronic disease. While anti-inflammatory properties of isolated dietary bioactive and functional foods have been routinely studied, the evaluation of dietary patterns on inflammation warrants further review—especially given the recent inclusion of dietary pattern recommendations into dietary guidelines and policies. Therefore, the objective of this narrative review is to examine current evidence linking diet to low-grade, systemic inflammation within the context of chronic disease. Specifically, we provide an update on the findings from human trials that have characterized anti-inflammatory properties of dietary patterns, defined by various methods and indexes. Given the complexity of interpreting results from dietary pattern analysis, we further present recent evidence on the anti-inflammatory roles of isolated bioactive nutrients and functional foods that are common components of distinct dietary patterns, in addition to considerations for interpreting dietary pattern research, population-specific dietary recommendations, and future studies. Overall, we observe a vast range of variability in the evidence from observational studies that have evaluated the relationships between healthy dietary patterns and inflammatory markers. These studies highlight the need for additional intervention studies with study designs that account for metabolic status, diversity in populations, breadth of inflammatory measurements, fasting vs. postprandial effects of diet, and control of confounding factors (e.g., genotype, microbiome profiles, and dietary adherence) in order to better understand the effect that diet has, as a whole, on inflammation. These strategies will help to strengthen diet recommendations aimed at reducing inflammation and chronic disease risk.

Highlights

  • Chronic low-grade, systemic inflammation is a distinctive feature present in the development of metabolic and cardiovascular diseases (CVD) [1,2,3,4]

  • We provide an update on the findings from human trials within the past 5 years (2014–present) that have characterized anti-inflammatory properties of dietary patterns, defined by various methods and indexes

  • The literature search performed in Scopus and PubMed included the following keywords and its combinations: dietary patterns, food patterns, diet, dietary inflammatory index, foods, anti-inflammatory foods, anti-inflammatory nutrients/inflammation, inflammatory markers, CRP, biomarkers of inflammation, cytokines, low-grade, systemic inflammation, and adipokines

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic low-grade, systemic inflammation is a distinctive feature present in the development of metabolic and cardiovascular diseases (CVD) [1,2,3,4]. The origins of low-grade, systemic inflammation are multifactorial and often stem from obesity-induced metabolic tissue dysfunction and/or the failure of immune cells to adequately ameliorate proinflammatory responses [11]. The objective of the present narrative review is to examine current evidence linking diet to low-grade, systemic inflammation within the context of chronic disease. Given the complexity of interpreting results from dietary pattern analysis, we further present recent evidence on the anti-inflammatory roles of isolated bioactive nutrients and functional foods that are common components of distinct dietary patterns, in addition to considerations for interpreting dietary pattern research, population-specific dietary recommendations, and future studies. The literature search performed in Scopus and PubMed included the following keywords and its combinations: dietary patterns, food patterns, diet, dietary inflammatory index, foods, anti-inflammatory foods, anti-inflammatory nutrients/inflammation, inflammatory markers, CRP, biomarkers of inflammation, cytokines, low-grade, systemic inflammation, and adipokines. A second search expanded the years from 2014 to present to provide a more comprehensive assessment of dietary patterns within the context of inflammatory biomarkers and chronic disease

Evaluation of Inflammatory Dietary Patterns Utilizing Dietary Indexes
Isolated Bioactive Nutrients and Functional Foods
Results
Conclusions and Practical Implications
Full Text
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