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The Relationship of Certain Diseases and Dietary Inflammatory Index in Older Adults: A Narrative Review

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Abstract

Purpose of Review

One of the important markers affecting aging processes is the increase in inflammatory markers. Many chronic diseases are associated with inflammation and chronic inflammation increases with aging. Inflammation can change with dietary components. Foods, compounds and nutrients that have anti-inflammatory or proinflammatory properties attract attention. According to the Dietary Inflammatory Index, positive scores are obtained if the nutrient has a proinflammatory effect on cytokines, and negative scores are obtained if it has an anti-inflammatory effect.

Recent Findings

A higher proinflammatory diet is associated with cardiometabolic diseases, neurodegenerative disease, cancers and musculoskeletal health and related mortality. In this study, its relationship with type 2 diabetes mellitus, obesity, metabolic syndrome, musculoskeletal diseases, dementia, depression and cancer, which are more common in older adults and known to be associated with inflammation, was examined.

Summary

Although studies involving under 65 years old are more prevalent, research involving older adults and Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII) is more limited. It is known that chronic inflammation increases with aging. Diet is one of the factors affecting inflammation. In the light of these investigations, the topics of anti-inflammatory nutrition and DII for the treatment of inflammation-related diseases in older adults are strong and open to development topics of discussion. Despite the significant interest in the potential positive effects of anti-inflammatory nutrition on diseases, contributing to clearer evidence of its protective effects on health necessitates further randomized controlled trials, in vivo, in vitro, cell, animal, human and case-control studies for better risk assessment.
Title
The Relationship of Certain Diseases and Dietary Inflammatory Index in Older Adults: A Narrative Review
Authors
Zeyneb Yildirim
Nevin Sanlier
Publication date
04-09-2024
Publisher
Springer US
Keywords
Dementia
Dementia
Published in
Current Nutrition Reports / Issue 4/2024
Electronic ISSN: 2161-3311
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13668-024-00566-4
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