Tab. III.
Authors | Type | Effects of Mediterranean diet |
---|---|---|
Kastoroni et al. [78] | Meta-analysis (Number of studies: 50; n: 534,906) |
0.42 cm ↓ waist circumference 1.17 mg/dL ↑ HDL 6.14 mg/dL ↓ TAG 2.35 mm Hg ↓ systolic and 1.58 mm Hg ↓ diastolic BP |
Huo et al. [79] | Meta-analysis (Number of studies: 9; n: 1178) |
0.30% ↓ HbA1c 0.72 mmol/L ↓ FPG 0.55 μU/mL ↓ fasting insulin 0.14 mmol/L ↓ total cholesterol 0.29 mmol/L ↓ TAG 1.45 mm Hg ↓ systolic and 1.41 mm Hg ↓ diastolic BP |
Richard et al. [80] | Original research (n: 26 males) |
C-reactive protein (CRP) ↓ IL-6, IL-18 and TNF-α ↓ ≥8.5 cm waist circumference ↓ IL-6 and IL-18 ↓ |
Moosavian et al. [81] | Systematic review (Number of studies: 10; n: 856) |
Improved body measurements, plasma lipid profile and glucose regulation |
Mayneris-Perxachs et al. [82] | Original research (n: 424) |
Incidence, reversion and prevalence of metabolic syndrome ↓ |
Pavić et al. [83] | Original research (n: 124) |
HDL ↑ and systolic BP ↓ The Mediterranean diet was effective for the components of metabolic syndrome |
Meslier et al. [84] | Original research (n: 82 healthy overweight and obese participants) |
Plasma cholesterol and LDL ↓ Insulin sensitivity ↑ Systemic inflammation ↓ |
↓: Reduction; ↑: Enhancement