Panacea Index Logo

Command Palette

Search for a command to run...

Food pyramid for subjects with chronic pain: foods and dietary constituents as anti-inflammatory and antioxidant agents.

Nutrition research reviews
June 1, 2018
Mariangela Rondanelli et al. (10 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the role of dietary components, including red wine, in managing chronic pain through inflammation and oxidative stress modulation.

Results Summary

The study included red wine (125 ml daily) as part of a proposed dietary pyramid for chronic pain management, suggesting it may have comparable effects to drug therapy in attenuating pain. No adverse effects specific to wine were mentioned.

Population

Chronic pain patients

Effective Dosage

125 ml daily

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (15)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
diet constituents
decrease
chronic pain
-
-
may play a modulatory role
#1
diet constituents
decrease
inflammation/oxidative stress
-
-
management of
#2
phenolic compounds in extra-virgin olive oil (EVO)
no change
drug management therapy
-
-
have comparable effects to
#3
carbohydrates with low glycaemic index
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
three portions per day
should be consumed
#4
fruits and vegetables
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
five portions per day
should be consumed
#5
yogurt
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
125 ml per day
should be consumed
#6
red wine
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
125 ml per day
should be consumed
#7
extra-virgin olive oil (EVO)
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
-
should be consumed
#8
legumes and fish
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
four portions per week
should be consumed
#9
white meat, eggs and fresh cheese
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
two portions per week
should be consumed
#10
red or processed meats
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
once per week
should be consumed
#11
sweets
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
occasionally
can be consumed
#12
specific customised supplementation (vitamin B12, vitamin D, n-3 fatty acids, fibre)
increase
dietary intake
chronic pain subjects
-
may need
#13
food pyramid proposal
decrease
pain
chronic pain patients
-
will serve to guide dietary intake with to the intent of alleviating
#14
targeted diet
decrease
constipation
-
-
can also help to solve problems related to
#15
Abstract

Emerging literature suggests that diet constituents may play a modulatory role in chronic pain (CP) through management of inflammation/oxidative stress, resulting in attenuation of pain. We performed a narrative review to evaluate the existing evidence regarding the optimum diet for the management of CP, and we built a food pyramid on this topic. The present review also describes the activities of various natural compounds contained in foods (i.e. phenolic compounds in extra-virgin olive oil (EVO)) listed on our pyramid, which have comparable effects to drug management therapy. This review included 172 eligible studies. The pyramid shows that carbohydrates with low glycaemic index should be consumed every day (three portions), together with fruits and vegetables (five portions), yogurt (125 ml), red wine (125 ml) and EVO; weekly: legumes and fish (four portions); white meat, eggs and fresh cheese (two portions); red or processed meats (once per week); sweets can be consumed occasionally. The food amounts are estimates based on nutritional and practical considerations. At the top of the pyramid there is a pennant: it means that CP subjects may need a specific customised supplementation (vitamin B12, vitamin D, n-3 fatty acids, fibre). The food pyramid proposal will serve to guide dietary intake with to the intent of alleviating pain in CP patients. Moreover, a targeted diet can also help to solve problems related to the drugs used to combat CP, i.e. constipation. However, this paper would be an early hypothetical proposal due to the limitations of the studies.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Anti-Inflammatory AgentsAntioxidantsChronic PainGlycemic IndexHumansOlive OilPhenols
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety80
Efficacy70/10
Quality65/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations63
Citations/Year9.0
Relative Citation Ratio3.98
NIH Percentile90.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.04
Normalized Score0.73
Related Supplements