Warwickshire Institute for the Study of Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire, Clifford Bridge Road, Coventry CV2 2DX, UK.
Division of Biomedical Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry CV2 2DX, UK.
Nutrients. 2023 Apr 29;15(9):2150. doi: 10.3390/nu15092150.
The Mediterranean Diet (MD) is plant-based and consists of multiple daily portions of vegetables, fruit, cereals, and olive oil. Although there are challenges with isolating the MD from the typical Mediterranean lifestyle and culture (including prolonged 'social' meals and siestas), much evidence supports the health benefits of the MD that include improved longevity, reduced metabolic risk of Diabetes Mellitus, obesity, and Metabolic Syndrome, reduced risk of malignancy and cardiovascular disease, and improved cognitive function. The MD is also associated with characteristic modifications to gut microbiota, mediated through its constituent parts (primarily dietary fibres, extra virgin olive oil, and polyunsaturated fatty acids [including ω-3]). These include enhanced growth of species that produce short-chain fatty acids (butyrate), such as and , enhanced growth of , , and species, and reduced growth of Firmicutes and species. Such changes in gut microbiota are known to be associated favourably with inflammatory and oxidative status, propensity for malignancy and overall metabolic health. A key challenge for the future is to explore the extent to which the health benefits of the MD are mediated by such changes to gut microbiota. The MD confers both health and environmental benefits. Adoption of the MD should perhaps be encouraged and facilitated more generally and not just restricted to populations from Mediterranean regions. However, there are key challenges to this approach that include limited perennial availability of the constituent parts of the MD in some non-Mediterranean regions, intolerability of a high-fibre diet for some people, and potential cultural disconnects that juxtapose some traditional (including Western) diets with the MD.
地中海饮食(MD)以植物为基础,包括每日多份蔬菜、水果、谷物和橄榄油。尽管从典型的地中海生活方式和文化中分离出 MD 存在挑战(包括长时间的“社交”餐和午睡),但大量证据支持 MD 的健康益处,包括延长寿命、降低糖尿病、肥胖和代谢综合征的代谢风险,降低恶性肿瘤和心血管疾病的风险,并改善认知功能。MD 还与肠道微生物群的特征性变化相关,这是通过其组成部分(主要是膳食纤维、特级初榨橄榄油和多不饱和脂肪酸[包括 ω-3])介导的。这些变化包括产生短链脂肪酸(丁酸盐)的物种的生长增强,如 和 , 和 物种的生长增强,以及厚壁菌门和 物种的生长减少。众所周知,肠道微生物群的这种变化与炎症和氧化状态、恶性肿瘤倾向和整体代谢健康有利相关。未来的一个关键挑战是探索 MD 的健康益处在多大程度上是通过这种肠道微生物群的变化来介导的。MD 既有益于健康,又有益于环境。应该更广泛地鼓励和促进 MD 的采用,而不仅仅局限于地中海地区的人群。然而,这种方法存在一些关键挑战,包括在一些非地中海地区 MD 的组成部分的常年供应有限、一些人不能耐受高纤维饮食以及一些潜在的文化脱节,将一些传统(包括西方)饮食与 MD 相对比。