AIM: To assess if a healthy diet might attenuate the positive sedentary-inflammation relation, whereas an unhealthy diet may increase the effect of sedentary behaviors on inflammatory biomarkers. METHODS: In 618 adolescents (13-17 years) of the European HELENA study, data were available on body composition, a set of inflammation markers, and food intake assessed by a self-administered computerized 24 h dietary recall for 2 days. A 9-point Mediterranean diet score and an antioxidant-rich diet z-score were used as dietary indices and tested as moderators. A set of low-grade inflammatory characteristics was used as outcome: several cytokines in an inflammatory ratio (IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, TGFβ-1), C-reactive protein, three cell-adhesion molecules (sVCAM-1, sICAM-1, sE-selectin), three cardiovascular risk markers (GGT, ALT, homocysteine) and three immune cell types (white blood cells, lymphocytes, CD3). Sedentary behaviors were self-reported and analyzed as total screen time. Multiple linear regression analyses tested moderation by diet in the sedentary behaviors-inflammation association adjusted for age, sex, country, adiposity (sum of six skinfolds), parental education, and socio-economic status. RESULTS: Both diet scores, Mediterranean and antioxidant-rich diet, were significant protective moderators in the effect of sedentary behaviors on alanine-transaminase enzyme (P = 0.014; P = 0.027), and on the pro/anti-inflammatory cytokine ratio (P = 0.001; P = 0.004), but not on other inflammatory parameters. CONCLUSION: A higher adherence to the Mediterranean diet or an antioxidant-rich diet may attenuate the onset of oxidative stress signs associated by sedentary behaviors, whereas a poor diet seems to increase inflammation.

Diet as a moderator in the association of sedentary behaviors with inflammatory biomarkers among adolescents in the HELENA study / Arouca, A.B., Santaliestra-Pasías, A.M., Moreno, L.A., Marcos, A., Widhalm, K., Molnár, D., Manios, Y., Gottrand, F., Kafatos, A., Kersting, M., Sjöström, M., Sáinz, Á.G., Ferrari, M., Huybrechts, I., González-Gross, M., Forsner, M., de Henauw, S., Michels, N., Moreno, L.A., Gottrand, F., et al.. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUTRITION. - ISSN 1436-6207. - 58:(2019), pp. 2051-2065. [10.1007/s00394-018-1764-4]

Diet as a moderator in the association of sedentary behaviors with inflammatory biomarkers among adolescents in the HELENA study

Scalfi, Luca;Vitaglione, Paola;Montagnese, Concetta;
2019

Abstract

AIM: To assess if a healthy diet might attenuate the positive sedentary-inflammation relation, whereas an unhealthy diet may increase the effect of sedentary behaviors on inflammatory biomarkers. METHODS: In 618 adolescents (13-17 years) of the European HELENA study, data were available on body composition, a set of inflammation markers, and food intake assessed by a self-administered computerized 24 h dietary recall for 2 days. A 9-point Mediterranean diet score and an antioxidant-rich diet z-score were used as dietary indices and tested as moderators. A set of low-grade inflammatory characteristics was used as outcome: several cytokines in an inflammatory ratio (IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, TGFβ-1), C-reactive protein, three cell-adhesion molecules (sVCAM-1, sICAM-1, sE-selectin), three cardiovascular risk markers (GGT, ALT, homocysteine) and three immune cell types (white blood cells, lymphocytes, CD3). Sedentary behaviors were self-reported and analyzed as total screen time. Multiple linear regression analyses tested moderation by diet in the sedentary behaviors-inflammation association adjusted for age, sex, country, adiposity (sum of six skinfolds), parental education, and socio-economic status. RESULTS: Both diet scores, Mediterranean and antioxidant-rich diet, were significant protective moderators in the effect of sedentary behaviors on alanine-transaminase enzyme (P = 0.014; P = 0.027), and on the pro/anti-inflammatory cytokine ratio (P = 0.001; P = 0.004), but not on other inflammatory parameters. CONCLUSION: A higher adherence to the Mediterranean diet or an antioxidant-rich diet may attenuate the onset of oxidative stress signs associated by sedentary behaviors, whereas a poor diet seems to increase inflammation.
2019
Diet as a moderator in the association of sedentary behaviors with inflammatory biomarkers among adolescents in the HELENA study / Arouca, A.B., Santaliestra-Pasías, A.M., Moreno, L.A., Marcos, A., Widhalm, K., Molnár, D., Manios, Y., Gottrand, F., Kafatos, A., Kersting, M., Sjöström, M., Sáinz, Á.G., Ferrari, M., Huybrechts, I., González-Gross, M., Forsner, M., de Henauw, S., Michels, N., Moreno, L.A., Gottrand, F., et al.. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUTRITION. - ISSN 1436-6207. - 58:(2019), pp. 2051-2065. [10.1007/s00394-018-1764-4]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/739324
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