4.7 Review

Can Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage Be a Good Model for the Investigation of the Anti-Inflammatory Properties of Diet in Humans?

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9010036

Keywords

oxidative stress; experimental model; anti-inflammatory diets; inflammatory response; chronic inflammation; low grade chronic inflammation; inflammatory models

Funding

  1. Postgraduate Programme of Applied Nutrition and Dietetics of Harokopio University

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Subclinical, low-grade inflammation is a key factor in many chronic diseases, and understanding the anti-inflammatory properties of diet is challenging. Exercise-induced muscle damage may serve as a useful model for evaluating the effects of diet on inflammation in humans.
Subclinical, low-grade, inflammation is one of the main pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the majority of chronic and non-communicable diseases. Several methodological approaches have been applied for the assessment of the anti-inflammatory properties of nutrition, however, their impact in human body remains uncertain, because of the fact that the majority of the studies reporting anti-inflammatory effect of dietary patterns, have been performed under laboratory settings and/or in animal models. Thus, the extrapolation of these results to humans is risky. It is therefore obvious that the development of an inflammatory model in humans, by which we could induce inflammatory responses to humans in a regulated, specific, and non-harmful way, could greatly facilitate the estimation of the anti-inflammatory properties of diet in a more physiological way and mechanistically relevant way. We believe that exercise-induced muscle damage (EIMD) could serve as such a model, either in studies investigating the homeostatic responses of individuals under inflammatory stimuli or for the estimation of the anti-inflammatory or pro-inflammatory potential of dietary patterns, foods, supplements, nutrients, or phytochemicals. Thus, in this review we discuss the possibility of exercise-induced muscle damage being an inflammation model suitable for the assessment of the anti-inflammatory properties of diet in humans.

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