Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian picture

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The purpose of this study was to evaluate the overall diet quality effects, mainly on antioxidant nutritional status and some cytokines related to the cellular immune response as well as oxidative stress in a healthy Italian populati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Azzini Elena, Polito Angela, Fumagalli Alessandro, Intorre Federica, Venneria Eugenia, Durazzo Alessandra, Zaccaria Maria, Ciarapica Donatella, Foddai Maria S, Mauro Beatrice, Raguzzini Anna, Palomba Lara, Maiani Giuseppe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-11-01
Series:Nutrition Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.nutritionj.com/content/10/1/125
id doaj-15c4106a293648f996bb03048f48e2d8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-15c4106a293648f996bb03048f48e2d82020-11-25T02:45:26ZengBMCNutrition Journal1475-28912011-11-0110112510.1186/1475-2891-10-125Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian pictureAzzini ElenaPolito AngelaFumagalli AlessandroIntorre FedericaVenneria EugeniaDurazzo AlessandraZaccaria MariaCiarapica DonatellaFoddai Maria SMauro BeatriceRaguzzini AnnaPalomba LaraMaiani Giuseppe<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The purpose of this study was to evaluate the overall diet quality effects, mainly on antioxidant nutritional status and some cytokines related to the cellular immune response as well as oxidative stress in a healthy Italian population group.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>An observational study was conducted on 131 healthy free-living subjects. Dietary intake was assessed by dietary diary. Standardised procedures were used to make anthropometric measurements. On blood samples (serum, plasma and whole blood) were evaluated: antioxidant status by vitamin A, vitamin E, carotenoids, vitamin C, uric acid, SH groups, SOD and GPx activities; lipid blood profile by total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, triglycerides; total antioxidant capacity by FRAP and TRAP; the immune status by TNF-α, and IL-10 cytokines; the levels of malondialdehyde in the erythrocytes as marker of lipid peroxidation.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The daily macronutrients intake (g/day) have shown a high lipids consumption and significant differences between the sexes with regard to daily micronutrients intake. On total sample mean Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS) was 4.5 ± 1.6 and no significant differences between the sexes were present. A greater adherence to a Mediterranean dietary pattern increases the circulating plasma levels of carotenoids (lutein plus zeaxanthin, cryptoxanthin, α and β-carotene), vitamin A and vitamin E. The levels of endogenous antioxidants were also improved. We observed higher levels in anti-inflammatory effect cytokines (IL-10) in subjects with MDS ≥ 6, by contrast, subjects with MDS ≤ 3 show higher levels in sense of proinflammatory (TNF α P < 0.05). Lower levels of MDA were associated with MDS > 4. Our data suggest a protective role of vitamin A against chronic inflammatory conditions especially in subjects with the highest adherence to the Mediterranean-type dietary pattern.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Mediterranean dietary pattern is associated with significant amelioration of multiple risk factors, including a better cardiovascular risk profile, reduced oxidative stress and modulation of inflammation.</p> http://www.nutritionj.com/content/10/1/125overall diet qualityoxidative stressmarkers of inflammationMediterranean dietary pattern
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Azzini Elena
Polito Angela
Fumagalli Alessandro
Intorre Federica
Venneria Eugenia
Durazzo Alessandra
Zaccaria Maria
Ciarapica Donatella
Foddai Maria S
Mauro Beatrice
Raguzzini Anna
Palomba Lara
Maiani Giuseppe
spellingShingle Azzini Elena
Polito Angela
Fumagalli Alessandro
Intorre Federica
Venneria Eugenia
Durazzo Alessandra
Zaccaria Maria
Ciarapica Donatella
Foddai Maria S
Mauro Beatrice
Raguzzini Anna
Palomba Lara
Maiani Giuseppe
Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian picture
Nutrition Journal
overall diet quality
oxidative stress
markers of inflammation
Mediterranean dietary pattern
author_facet Azzini Elena
Polito Angela
Fumagalli Alessandro
Intorre Federica
Venneria Eugenia
Durazzo Alessandra
Zaccaria Maria
Ciarapica Donatella
Foddai Maria S
Mauro Beatrice
Raguzzini Anna
Palomba Lara
Maiani Giuseppe
author_sort Azzini Elena
title Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian picture
title_short Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian picture
title_full Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian picture
title_fullStr Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian picture
title_full_unstemmed Mediterranean Diet Effect: an Italian picture
title_sort mediterranean diet effect: an italian picture
publisher BMC
series Nutrition Journal
issn 1475-2891
publishDate 2011-11-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The purpose of this study was to evaluate the overall diet quality effects, mainly on antioxidant nutritional status and some cytokines related to the cellular immune response as well as oxidative stress in a healthy Italian population group.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>An observational study was conducted on 131 healthy free-living subjects. Dietary intake was assessed by dietary diary. Standardised procedures were used to make anthropometric measurements. On blood samples (serum, plasma and whole blood) were evaluated: antioxidant status by vitamin A, vitamin E, carotenoids, vitamin C, uric acid, SH groups, SOD and GPx activities; lipid blood profile by total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, triglycerides; total antioxidant capacity by FRAP and TRAP; the immune status by TNF-α, and IL-10 cytokines; the levels of malondialdehyde in the erythrocytes as marker of lipid peroxidation.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The daily macronutrients intake (g/day) have shown a high lipids consumption and significant differences between the sexes with regard to daily micronutrients intake. On total sample mean Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS) was 4.5 ± 1.6 and no significant differences between the sexes were present. A greater adherence to a Mediterranean dietary pattern increases the circulating plasma levels of carotenoids (lutein plus zeaxanthin, cryptoxanthin, α and β-carotene), vitamin A and vitamin E. The levels of endogenous antioxidants were also improved. We observed higher levels in anti-inflammatory effect cytokines (IL-10) in subjects with MDS ≥ 6, by contrast, subjects with MDS ≤ 3 show higher levels in sense of proinflammatory (TNF α P < 0.05). Lower levels of MDA were associated with MDS > 4. Our data suggest a protective role of vitamin A against chronic inflammatory conditions especially in subjects with the highest adherence to the Mediterranean-type dietary pattern.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Mediterranean dietary pattern is associated with significant amelioration of multiple risk factors, including a better cardiovascular risk profile, reduced oxidative stress and modulation of inflammation.</p>
topic overall diet quality
oxidative stress
markers of inflammation
Mediterranean dietary pattern
url http://www.nutritionj.com/content/10/1/125
work_keys_str_mv AT azzinielena mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT politoangela mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT fumagallialessandro mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT intorrefederica mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT venneriaeugenia mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT durazzoalessandra mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT zaccariamaria mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT ciarapicadonatella mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT foddaimarias mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT maurobeatrice mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT raguzzinianna mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT palombalara mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
AT maianigiuseppe mediterraneandieteffectanitalianpicture
_version_ 1724762941131063296