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Dietary patterns and cardiometabolic health: Clinical evidence and mechanism

Wenting Wang, Yanfei Liu, Yiwen Li, Binyu Luo, Zhixiu Lin, Keji Chen, Yue Liu
Key takeaways
  1. 01Healthy dietary patterns reduce the risk of cardiometabolic disease and mortality
  2. 02Mediterranean and plant-based diets are highlighted as effective health-promoting strategies
  3. 03Gut microbiota plays a critical role in the interaction between diet and health
  4. 04Future nutritional strategies should be personalized based on individual gut microbiota profiles

Healthy dietary patterns reduce cardiometabolic risk, though individual responses are significantly influenced by the gut microbiota.

Abstract

For centuries, the search for nutritional interventions to underpin cardiovascular treatment and prevention guidelines has contributed to the rapid development of the field of dietary patterns and cardiometabolic disease (CMD). Numerous studies have demonstrated that healthy dietary patterns with emphasis on food-based recommendations are the gold standard for extending lifespan and reducing the risks of CMD and mortality. Healthy dietary patterns include various permutations of energy restriction, macronutrients, and food intake patterns such as calorie restriction, intermittent fasting, Mediterranean diet, plant-based diets, etc. Early implementation of healthy dietary patterns in patients with CMD is encouraged, but an understanding of the mechanisms by which these patterns trigger cardiometabolic benefits remains incomplete. Hence, this review examined several dietary patterns that may improve cardiometabolic health, including restrictive dietary patterns, regional dietary patterns, and diets based on controlled macronutrients and food groups, summarizing cutting-edge evidence and potential mechanisms for CMD prevention and treatment. Particularly, considering individual differences in responses to dietary composition and nutritional changes in organ tissue diversity, we highlighted the critical role of individual gut microbiota in the crosstalk between diet and CMD and recommend a more precise and dynamic nutritional strategy for CMD by developing dietary patterns based on individual gut microbiota profiles.

Cite this study
APA
Wenting Wang, Yanfei Liu, Yiwen Li, Binyu Luo, Zhixiu Lin, Keji Chen, & Yue Liu (2023). Dietary patterns and cardiometabolic health: Clinical evidence and mechanism.
MLA
Wenting Wang, et al. "Dietary patterns and cardiometabolic health: Clinical evidence and mechanism." 2023.
Chicago
Wenting Wang et al. 2023. "Dietary patterns and cardiometabolic health: Clinical evidence and mechanism."