4.7 Review

Do Diet and Dietary Supplements Mitigate Clinical Outcomes in COVID-19?

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14091909

Keywords

COVID-19; nutrition; diet; vitamin; dietary supplement; SARS-CoV-2

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This article discusses the potential roles of diet and supplementation in preventing and treating COVID-19. While the impact of nutrition on other respiratory illnesses has been studied, there is less research on the specific impact related to COVID-19. The evidence regarding the efficacy of diet supplementation on infection risk, disease severity, and recovery is inconsistent.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has caused a pandemic and upheaval that health authorities and citizens around the globe are still grappling with to this day. While public health measures, vaccine development, and new therapeutics have made great strides in understanding and managing the pandemic, there has been an increasing focus on the potential roles of diet and supplementation in disease prevention and adjuvant treatment. In the literature, the impact of nutrition on other respiratory illnesses, including the common cold, pneumonia, and influenza, has been widely demonstrated in both animal and human models. However, there is much less research on the impact related to COVID-19. The present study discusses the potential uses of diets, vitamins, and supplements, including the Mediterranean diet, glutathione, zinc, and traditional Chinese medicine, in the prevention of infection and severe illness. The evidence demonstrating the efficacy of diet supplementation on infection risk, disease duration, severity, and recovery is mixed and inconsistent. More clinical trials are necessary in order to clearly demonstrate the contribution of nutrition and to guide potential therapeutic protocols.

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