Plant-heavy Mediterranean eating protects against disease, review confirms
Yannakoulia Μ, Kontogianni ΜD, Antonopoulou S, Fragopoulou E, Kyriacou A
Food Forest
The olive tree, legumes, and whole grains that make up a food forest's backbone aren't just garden staples; decades of research now show they actively reshape your gut microbes and reduce inflammation in ways that prevent disease.
Scientists reviewed years of research on the Mediterranean diet, which is built around vegetables, fruit, legumes, whole grains, nuts, and olive oil, with only small amounts of meat and dairy. They found consistent evidence that eating this way protects against heart disease, diabetes, fatty liver disease, kidney disease, and even some cancers. The protection seems to come from how these plant foods change gut bacteria, lower inflammation, and improve blood vessel health.
Key Findings
Consistent protective associations found across cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, metabolic liver disease, chronic kidney disease, neurodegenerative disorders, and cancer
Evidence draws from prospective cohort studies, randomized controlled trials, and meta-analyses, with strongest effects for cardiovascular and metabolic outcomes
Biological mechanisms include changes to inflammation, oxidative stress, endothelial function, thrombosis, gut microbiome composition, and metabolomic profiles
chevron_right Technical Summary
A major diet review confirms that eating mostly plants, olive oil, nuts, and legumes lowers risk for heart disease, diabetes, liver disease, and several other chronic illnesses, and researchers are now mapping exactly how it works inside the body.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Mediterranean diet: definitions, health effects and metabolic pathways - evidence and future directions.
The Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) is one of the most extensively studied dietary patterns in relation to chronic disease prevention and management. MedDiet reflects a plant-forward dietary model cha...
open_in_new Read full abstractAbstract copyright held by the original publisher.
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