Does Western diet cause inflammatory diseases?
Switching from Western diet to traditional African diet may have anti-inflammatory benefits
Chronic inflammation has a major role in the development of lifestyle-related diseases such as heart disease and type 2 diabetes.
According to current study, a modern Western diet that is low in whole plant-based foods and high in processed foods might worsen this chronic inflammation, reported Medical News Today.
To explore the effects of this dietary shift, researchers from Radboud University Medical Centre and Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College investigated the health impacts at the cellular level.
Their findings indicate that just 2 weeks of adopting a Western diet over a traditional African diet can lead to increased inflammation, weakened immune responses, and disrupted metabolic pathways tied to lifestyle-related diseases.
In contrast, switching from a Western diet to a traditional African diet or consuming traditional fermented beverages may have anti-inflammatory benefits.
These findings lend credence to the notion that traditional diets, such as traditional African, Mediterranean, and Latin American cuisines, which are primarily plant-based, can enhance health and reduce the risk of diseases linked to a certain lifestyle, albeit further research is required.
According to their findings, a two-week transition from a traditional African diet to a Western diet interferred with important metabolic pathways that are connected to diseases associated to lifestyle choices.
Additionally, it seemed to set off a pro-inflammatory condition that involved gene expression alterations, inflammatory substances in the blood, and white blood cells.
Their immune cells also lost some of their ability to fight off infections.
On the other hand, ingesting the fermented beverage or switching from a Western diet to a traditional African diet that is primarily plant-based had primarily anti-inflammatory effects, such as a decrease in inflammatory markers.
Disclaimer: Consult your doctor before trying anything.
-
Can aging be reversed? First human trials set to begin
-
Can 7 days change your mind? Experts break down the science of the meditative brain
-
New drug in clinical trial may finally treat hepatitis E
-
New aging brain study finds single protein behind cognitive decline and possible reversal
-
Your body’s real age may surprise you, experts say
-
High salt intake raises heart failure risk, study finds
-
How a new blood test detects active, infectious Tuberculosis: Here’s everything to know
-
Young people quit UK jobs due to health issues, study finds