Does the Mediterranean Diet Protect against Stress-Induced Inflammatory Activation in European Adolescents? The HELENA Study
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Carvalho, Kenia M. B.; Ronca, Débora B.; Michels, Nathalie; Huybrechts, Inge; Cuenca-García, Magdalena; Marcos, Ascensión; Molnár, Dénes; Dallongeville, Jean; Manios, Yannis; Schaan, Beatriz D.; Moreno, Luis; De Henauw, Stefaan; Carvalho, Livia A.Editorial
MDPI
Fecha
2018-11-10Referencia bibliográfica
Carvalho, Kenia M. B. [et al.]. Does the Mediterranean Diet Protect against Stress-Induced Inflammatory Activation in European Adolescents? The HELENA Study. Nutrients 2018, 10, 1770
Patrocinador
This work funded by CAPES—Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education within the Ministry of Education of Brazil to KMBC. This study was also funded by the Medical Research Council (UK) Immuno-Psychiatry Consortium grant awarded to University of Cambridge, University College London with industrial partnership funding from GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and Janssen.Resumen
Stress increases inflammation but whether adherence to Mediterranean diet counteracts
this association and how early can these effects be observed is not well known. We tested whether
(1) cortisol is associated to inflammation, (2) cortisol is associated to the adolescent Mediterranean
diet score (aMDS), (3) aMDS lessens inflammation, (4) aMDS associates with cortisol levels and
inflammation. Two hundred and forty-two adolescents (137 females; 12.5–17.5 years old) provided
salivary cortisol, blood and 2-day 24-h dietary recall from which aMDS was derived. Cortisol levels
were associated with increased tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α B = 11.887, ρ = 0.001) when adjusted for
age, gender, parental education and body mass index (BMI). Moreover, cortisol levels were inversely
associated to adherence to the Mediterranean Diet (B = -1.023, ρ = 0.002). Adolescents with higher
adherence to aMDS had lower levels of interleukins (IL) IL-1, IL-2, IL-6 and TNF-α, compared to
those who did not adhere. The association between cortisol and TNF-_ was no longer significant
when aMDS was included in the model (B = 6.118, ρ = 0.139). In addition, comparing lower and
higher aMDS groups, the association between cortisol and TNF-α was only observed in those with
lower aMDS adherence. Our study suggests that adherence to the Mediterranean Diet may counteract
the effect of stress on inflammatory biomarkers which may contribute to decreasing the risk of future
mental health.