Mediterranean diet and platelet-activating factor; a systematic review.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether components of the Mediterranean Diet, including wine, could favorably modulate the pro-inflammatory actions and metabolism of platelet-activating factor (PAF).
Results Summary
Preliminary results suggest that wine, among other components of the Mediterranean Diet, may help modulate PAF's pro-inflammatory actions and regulate its metabolism, though findings are inconsistent due to methodological variability.
Population
Not specified (general human population inferred from epidemiologic and intervention studies).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
micronutrients and extracts from several components and characteristic food of the Mediterranean Diet | decrease | PAF's actions and metabolism | - | - | can favorably modulate | #1 |
characteristic 'healthy' components of the Mediterranean Diet, especially, cereals, legumes, vegetables, fish and wine | decrease | the pro-inflammatory actions of PAF | - | - | can favorably modulate | #2 |
characteristic 'healthy' components of the Mediterranean Diet, especially, cereals, legumes, vegetables, fish and wine | neutral | PAF metabolism | - | - | can regulate | #3 |
Mediterranean Diet | decrease | chronic diseases | - | - | can prevent | #4 |
Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is a glycerylether lipid and one of the most potent endogenous mediators of inflammation. Through its binding to a well-characterized receptor it initiates a plethora of cellular pro-inflammatory actions participating by this way to the pathology of most chronic diseases, including cardiovascular and renal diseases, CNS decline and cancer. Among the variety of prudent dietary patterns, Mediterranean Diet (MD) is the dietary pattern with the strongest evidence for its ability to prevent the same chronic diseases. In addition, micronutrients and extracts from several components and characteristic food of the MD can favorably modulate PAF's actions and metabolism either directly or indirectly. However, the role of this traditional diet on PAF metabolism and actions has rarely been studied before. This systematic review summarizes, presents and discusses the outcomes of epidemiologic and intervention studies in humans, investigating the relationships between PAF status and MD. Seventeen full-text articles trying to interlink the components of MD and PAF are found and presented. The results are inconsistent due to the variability of the measured indices and methodology followed. However, preliminary results indicate that the characteristic "healthy" components of the MD, especially, cereals, legumes, vegetables, fish and wine can favorably modulate the pro-inflammatory actions of PAF and regulate its metabolism. Larger, well-controlled studies are necessary to elucidate whether the attenuation of PAF actions can mediate the preventive properties of MD against chronic diseases.