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The association between dietary inflammation index and the risk of rheumatoid arthritis in Americans.

Shate XiangYao WangSuhai QianJie LiYibo JinXinghong DingTaotao Xu
Published in: Clinical rheumatology (2022)
The inflammatory potential of the diet is positively correlated with the risk of RA, and has a superimposed effect with other risk factors, increasing the probability of the risk of disease. These results emphasize that reducing the intake of pro-inflammatory foods may be an effective measure to prevent the onset of rheumatoid arthritis. However, eating anti-inflammatory foods exclusively is not the best option. Intaking some pro-inflammatory foods like protein, energy, and total saturated acids may be necessary to maintain the physiological function of the human body. Key Points • Dietary inflammation index (DII) is positively correlated with RA risk. • When DII and other risk factors appear at the same time, the effects of the two will be superimposed on each other, increasing the risk of RA. • When the DII is the same, Hispanic has a higher incidence of RA. • Among the pro-inflammatory foods, the intake of protein, energy, and saturated fatty acids is still required by RA patients.
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