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Dietary factors and low-grade inflammation in relation to overweight and obesity

Philip C. Calder, Namanjeet Ahluwalia, Fred Brouns, Timo M. Buetler, Karine Clément, Karen Cunningham, Katherine Esposito, Lena S. Jönsson, Hubert Kolb, Mirian Lansink, Ascensión Marcos, Andrew N. Margioris, Nathan V. Matusheski, H. Nordmann, John O’Brien

British Journal Of Nutrition · 2011 · ▲ 1,069 citations

Abstract

Low-grade inflammation is a characteristic of the obese state, and adipose tissue releases many inflammatory mediators. The source of these mediators within adipose tissue is not clear, but infiltrating macrophages seem to be especially important, although adipocytes themselves play a role. Obese people have higher circulating concentrations of many inflammatory markers than lean people do, and these are believed to play a role in causing insulin resistance and other metabolic disturbances. Blood concentrations of inflammatory markers are lowered following weight loss. In the hours following the consumption of a meal, there is an elevation in the concentrations of inflammatory mediators in the bloodstream, which is exaggerated in obese subjects and in type 2 diabetics. Both high-glucose and high-fat meals may induce postprandial inflammation, and this is exaggerated by a high meal content of advanced glycation end products (AGE) and partly ablated by inclusion of certain antioxidants or antioxidant-containing foods within the meal. Healthy eating patterns are associated with lower circulating concentrations of inflammatory markers. Among the components of a healthy diet, whole grains, vegetables and fruits, and fish are all associated with lower inflammation. AGE are associated with enhanced oxidative stress and inflammation. SFA and trans-MUFA are pro-inflammatory, while PUFA, especially long-chain n-3 PUFA, are anti-inflammatory. Hyperglycaemia induces both postprandial and chronic low-grade inflammation. Vitamin C, vitamin E and carotenoids decrease the circulating concentrations of inflammatory markers. Potential mechanisms are described and research gaps, which limit our understanding of the interaction between diet and postprandial and chronic low-grade inflammation, are identified.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1017/s0007114511005460
Canonical
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2026-06-16 MST

Cite this

APA
Calder, P.C., Ahluwalia, N., Brouns, F., Buetler, T.M., Clément, K., Cunningham, K., Esposito, K., Jönsson, L.S., Kolb, H., Lansink, M., Marcos, A., Margioris, A.N., Matusheski, N.V., Nordmann, H., O’Brien, J., Pugliese, G., Rizkalla, S.W., Schalkwijk, C.G., Tuomilehto, J., &amp; Wärnberǵ, J. (2011). Dietary factors and low-grade inflammation in relation to overweight and obesity. <em>British Journal Of Nutrition</em>. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007114511005460
Vancouver
Calder PC, Ahluwalia N, Brouns F, Buetler TM, Clément K, Cunningham K, et al. Dietary factors and low-grade inflammation in relation to overweight and obesity. British Journal Of Nutrition. 2011. doi:10.1017/s0007114511005460.
BibTeX
@article{philip2011Dietar, title = {Dietary factors and low-grade inflammation in relation to overweight and obesity}, author = {Philip C. Calder and Namanjeet Ahluwalia and Fred Brouns and Timo M. Buetler and Karine Clément and Karen Cunningham and Katherine Esposito and Lena S. Jönsson and Hubert Kolb and Mirian Lansink and Ascensión Marcos and Andrew N. Margioris and Nathan V. Matusheski and H. Nordmann and John O’Brien and Giuseppe Pugliese and Salwa W. Rizkalla and Casper G. Schalkwijk and Jaakko Tuomilehto and Julia Wärnberǵ and Bernhard Watzl and Brigitte M. Winklhofer‐Roob}, journal = {British Journal Of Nutrition}, year = {2011}, doi = {10.1017/s0007114511005460}, }

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