Nutrients (Nov 2020)

Pro-Inflammatory Diet Is Associated with Adiposity during Childhood and with Adipokines and Inflammatory Markers at 11 Years in Mexican Children

  • Sofia Barragán-Vázquez,
  • Ana Carolina Ariza,
  • Ivonne Ramírez Silva,
  • Lilia Susana Pedraza,
  • Juan A. Rivera Dommarco,
  • Eduardo Ortiz-Panozo,
  • Elena Zambrano,
  • Luis A. Reyes Castro,
  • Nitin Shivappa,
  • James R. Hébert,
  • Reynaldo Martorell,
  • Aryeh D. Stein,
  • Albino Barraza-Villarreal,
  • Isabelle Romieu,
  • Laura Avila-Jiménez,
  • Usha Ramakrishnan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12123658
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. 3658

Abstract

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There is limited evidence about the inflammatory potential of diet in children. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between the Children’s Dietary Inflammatory Index (C-DII) from 5 to 11 years with adiposity and inflammatory biomarkers in Mexican children. We analyzed 726 children from a birth cohort study with complete dietary information and measurements to evaluate adiposity at 5, 7 and 11 y and 286 children with IL-6, hsCRP, leptin and adiponectin information at 11 y. C-DII trajectories were estimated using latent class linear mixed models. We used linear mixed models for adiposity and logistic and multinomial regression for biomarkers. In girls, each one-point increase in C-DII score was associated with greater adiposity (abdominal-circumference 0.41%, p = 0.03; skinfold-sum 1.76%, p = 0.01; and BMI Z-score 0.05, p = 0.01). At 11 y the C-DII was associated with greater leptin (34% ≥ 13.0 ng/mL, p = 0.03) and hsCRP concentrations (29% ≥ 3.00 mg/L, p = 0.06) and lower adiponectin/leptin ratio (75% p = 0.02). C-DII trajectory 3 in boys was associated with a 75.2% (p p = 0.02) in the adiponectin/leptin ratio. This study suggests that the inflammatory potential of diet may influence adiposity in girls and the homeostasis of adipose tissue and chronic subclinical inflammation in 11-year-old children.

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