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Review
. 2019 Aug 12;11(8):1873.
doi: 10.3390/nu11081873.

Dietary Inflammatory Index and Non-Communicable Disease Risk: A Narrative Review

Affiliations
Review

Dietary Inflammatory Index and Non-Communicable Disease Risk: A Narrative Review

Catherine M Phillips et al. Nutrients. .

Abstract

There are over 1,000,000 publications on diet and health and over 480,000 references on inflammation in the National Library of Medicine database. In addition, there have now been over 30,000 peer-reviewed articles published on the relationship between diet, inflammation, and health outcomes. Based on this voluminous literature, it is now recognized that low-grade, chronic systemic inflammation is associated with most non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease, cancers, respiratory and musculoskeletal disorders, as well as impaired neurodevelopment and adverse mental health outcomes. Dietary components modulate inflammatory status. In recent years, the Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII®), a literature-derived dietary index, was developed to characterize the inflammatory potential of habitual diet. Subsequently, a large and rapidly growing body of research investigating associations between dietary inflammatory potential, determined by the DII, and risk of a wide range of NCDs has emerged. In this narrative review, we examine the current state of the science regarding relationships between the DII and cancer, cardiometabolic, respiratory and musculoskeletal diseases, neurodevelopment, and adverse mental health outcomes. We synthesize the findings from recent studies, discuss potential underlying mechanisms, and look to the future regarding novel applications of the adult and children's DII (C-DII) scores and new avenues of investigation in this field of nutritional research.

Keywords: bone health; cancer; cardiometabolic health; dietary inflammatory index; inflammation; mental health; metabolic syndrome; neurodevelopment; obesity; respiratory health.

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Conflict of interest statement

James R. Hébert owns controlling interest in Connecting Health Innovations LLC (CHI), a company that has licensed the right to his invention of the dietary inflammatory index (DII®) from the University of South Carolina in order to develop computer and smart phone applications for patient counseling and dietary intervention in clinical settings. Nitin Shivappa is an employee of CHI.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Sequence of steps in creating the Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII®).

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