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地中海饮食可减少成年雌性非人灵长类动物的社交隔离和焦虑。

Mediterranean Diet Reduces Social Isolation and Anxiety in Adult Female Nonhuman Primates.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.

Department of Pathology, Section on Comparative Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC 27157, USA.

出版信息

Nutrients. 2022 Jul 12;14(14):2852. doi: 10.3390/nu14142852.

Abstract

Dietary composition is associated with the differential prevalence of psychiatric disorders; the Western diet confers increased risk, while the Mediterranean diet appears to reduce risk. In nonhuman primates, anxiety-like behaviors and social isolation have been linked to both Western diet consumption and increased inflammatory disease risk, and recent evidence suggests that diet composition may affect immune system function in part through its effects on behavior. This is particularly important in the context of the global COVID-19 pandemic in which social isolation has been associated with disease. Here, we examined the effects of Western- and Mediterranean-like diets on social behavior in a randomized, 34-month preclinical trial in middle-aged female cynomolgus macaques (). Diet induced rapid and persistent changes in a suite of behaviors. After just three months of experimental diet consumption, a composite measure of diet-altered behavior (DAB) significantly differed between the two diets ( = 0.014) and remained different throughout the 24-month experimental observation period ( = 2.2 × 10). Monkeys fed the Western diet spent more time alone (FDR = 4.4 × 10) and displayed more anxiety behavior (FDR = 0.048), whereas monkeys fed the Mediterranean diet spent more time resting (FDR = 0.0013), attentive (FDR = 0.017), and in body contact with groupmates (FDR = 4.1 × 10). These differences were largely due to changes in behavior of animals fed the Mediterranean diet, while Western-diet-fed-animals exhibited similar behaviors compared to the eight-month baseline period, during which all monkeys consumed a common laboratory diet. These observations provide experimental support in a nonhuman primate model, demonstrating a potential therapeutic benefit of the Mediterranean diet consumption to reduce social isolation and anxiety and thus mitigate social isolation-associated disorders that often accompany illness and disability.

摘要

饮食结构与精神疾病的不同发病率有关;西方饮食会增加患病风险,而地中海饮食似乎会降低风险。在非人类灵长类动物中,焦虑样行为和社会隔离与西方饮食的摄入以及炎症性疾病风险的增加有关,最近的证据表明,饮食结构可能会通过其对行为的影响来影响免疫系统的功能。在全球 COVID-19 大流行的背景下,这一点尤为重要,因为社会隔离与疾病有关。在这里,我们在中年雌性食蟹猴()的一项随机、34 个月的临床前试验中研究了西方饮食和地中海饮食对社会行为的影响。饮食迅速而持久地改变了一系列行为。仅仅三个月的实验饮食消费后,两种饮食之间的饮食改变行为(DAB)的综合指标就有显著差异( = 0.014),并在 24 个月的实验观察期内一直存在差异( = 2.2 × 10)。饲喂西方饮食的猴子独处的时间更多(FDR = 4.4 × 10),表现出更多的焦虑行为(FDR = 0.048),而饲喂地中海饮食的猴子休息的时间更多(FDR = 0.0013),注意力更集中(FDR = 0.017),与同伴有身体接触(FDR = 4.1 × 10)。这些差异主要归因于饲喂地中海饮食的动物行为的改变,而饲喂西方饮食的动物的行为与八个月的基线期相似,在此期间,所有猴子都食用一种常见的实验室饮食。这些观察结果为非人类灵长类动物模型提供了实验支持,证明了地中海饮食的摄入具有潜在的治疗益处,可以减少社会隔离和焦虑,从而减轻常伴随疾病和残疾而来的与社会隔离相关的障碍。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/1e34/9322105/06848e4a9a47/nutrients-14-02852-g001.jpg

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