How the Mediterranean diet and some of its components modulate inflammatory pathways in arthritis.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to explore how the Mediterranean diet, including its influence on the arachidonic acid cascade, affects inflammation and clinical disease progression in arthritis patients.
Results Summary
The study suggests that the Mediterranean diet, particularly its n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, modulates the arachidonic acid cascade and immune cell activity, potentially benefiting arthritis patients by reducing inflammation and improving clinical outcomes.
Population
Arthritis patients
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
nutrient and non-nutrient components of food | decrease | the inflammatory process | - | - | have been shown to affect | #1 |
nutrient and non-nutrient components of food | decrease | clinical disease progression | - | - | influence | #2 |
The Mediterranean diet model | increase | a number of beneficial health effects | - | - | has already been linked to | #3 |
fat and non-fat components of the Mediterranean dietary pattern | increase | important anti-inflammatory activities | - | - | have been shown to exert | #4 |
fat and non-fat components of the Mediterranean dietary pattern | decrease | the arachidonic acid cascade | - | - | affecting | #5 |
fat and non-fat components of the Mediterranean dietary pattern | decrease | the expression of some proinflammatory genes | - | - | affecting | #6 |
fat and non-fat components of the Mediterranean dietary pattern | decrease | the activity of immune cells | - | - | affecting | #7 |
N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids | decrease | lymphocyte and monocyte functions | - | - | have been shown to affect | #8 |
The Mediterranean diet pattern | increase | its beneficial effects | - | - | exerts | #9 |
The Mediterranean diet pattern | increase | arthritis patients | arthritis patients | - | may potentially benefit | #10 |
Arthritis encompasses a heterogeneous group of diseases characterised by inflammation that leads not only to joint damage, bone erosion, severe pain and disability, but also affects other organs of the body, resulting in increased morbidity and mortality. Although the mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of joint diseases are for the most part unknown, a number of nutrient and non-nutrient components of food have been shown to affect the inflammatory process and, in particular, to influence clinical disease progression. The Mediterranean diet model has already been linked to a number of beneficial health effects: both fat and non-fat components of the Mediterranean dietary pattern have been shown to exert important anti-inflammatory activities by affecting the arachidonic acid cascade, the expression of some proinflammatory genes, and the activity of immune cells. N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, in particular, have been shown to affect lymphocyte and monocyte functions, crucially involved in adaptive and innate immunity. Although some aspects concerning the mechanisms of action through which the Mediterranean diet pattern exerts its beneficial effects remain to be elucidated, arthritis patients may potentially benefit from it in view of their increased cardiovascular risk and the treatment they require which may have side effects.