The Evidence for Anti-Inflammatory Eating: From the Mediterranean Diet to Polyphenols

The Evidence for Anti-Inflammatory Eating: From the Mediterranean Diet to Polyphenols

Chronic low-grade inflammation is the common circuit linking cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, autoimmune disorders, and cancer (Furman 2019 *Nat Med*). Diet can slow that circuit. PREDIMED, a large RCT, showed the Mediterranean diet cut major cardiovascular events about 30%; SMILES showed the same dietary pattern eases depression. We separate 'detox' hype from real anti-inflammatory eating — and ask whether kimchi, perilla, and green tea can make Korean food itself anti-inflammatory.

TL;DR

PREDIMED RCT (n=7,447): Mediterranean diet + olive oil/nuts cut major CV events ~30% (2018 *NEJM*). SMILES RCT (n=67): modified Mediterranean diet — ~32% depression remission at 12 weeks vs 8% (Jacka 2017 *BMC Med*). Anti-inflammatory eating is *additive* — omega-3, polyphenols, fiber, spices, ferments — not restrictive 'detox.'

The Quiet Fire of Chronic Low-Grade Inflammation

Acute inflammation saves us — a swollen finger means immune cells arrived. The problem is chronic low-grade inflammation, a barely visible fire smoldering for decades.

Furman et al.'s 2019 Nature Medicine review consolidated this picture: cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, depression, autoimmune disorders, and several cancers — superficially different — share an inflammatory current. The most commonly measured markers are CRP, IL-6, and TNF-α. Chronically elevated CRP predicts heart attack, stroke, and dementia. Strikingly, the strongest evidence for putting out this fire comes not from a drug but from food.

PREDIMED — The Biggest Trial for Anti-Inflammatory Eating

The Spanish PREDIMED trial (Estruch, Ros, Salas-Salvadó et al., NEJM 2013) randomized 7,447 high-CV-risk adults to ① Mediterranean diet + extra-virgin olive oil (1 L/week supplied), ② Mediterranean diet + a daily handful of nuts, or ③ low-fat advice. Over 4.8 years, both Mediterranean arms saw major cardiovascular events fall about 30%.

A note of intellectual honesty: in 2018 the team retracted and republished the paper (NEJM correction) after auditing some sites where pairs/clusters were assigned together, violating strict individual randomization. Reanalysis preserved the main conclusions with slightly more conservative effect sizes. This is science self-correcting, not crumbling. de Lorgeril's 1999 LYON Diet Heart Study (Circulation) had pointed the same way; Schwingshackl's 2018 JACC meta-analysis again confirmed Mediterranean eating lowers CV events and overall mortality.

It Also Works for Depression — SMILES

The first RCT showing diet alters mood came from SMILES (Jacka, Berk et al., 2017, BMC Medicine). 67 adults with moderate-to-severe depression were randomized to dietitian-led Mediterranean coaching vs social-support control. At 12 weeks, about 32% of the diet group hit remission vs about 8% of controls. Sample size is small but the effect is large; Schmidt 2024 and other meta-analyses now consistently link Mediterranean patterns to lower depression risk.

This fits a new paradigm: the brain as an inflammatory organ. High IL-6/TNF-α predicts depression, and lowering those markers via diet may lift mood.

What Actually Cools the Fire

Five families do most of the work.

Food group Main mechanism Korean examples Evidence
Omega-3 (EPA/DHA, ALA) Curbs pro-inflammatory eicosanoids; resolvins/protectins (Calder 2017 Biochem Soc Trans) Mackerel, perilla seeds & oil, walnuts Strong (RCT + meta)
Polyphenols NF-κB suppression, antioxidant Green tea (EGCG), blueberries, dark chocolate, olive oil oleocanthal Moderate–Strong
Fermentable fiber Gut microbes → SCFAs (butyrate) → mucosal immunity (Slavin 2013) Barley, oats, sweet potato, mixed-grain rice Strong
Spices Antioxidant, COX/LOX inhibition Garlic (allicin), chili (capsaicin), turmeric (curcumin), ginger Moderate (curcumin: low bioavailability)
Fermented foods Live microbes + postbiotics Kimchi, doenjang, cheonggukjang, yogurt Moderate (strong observational, fewer RCTs)

Why 'Detox' Isn't Anti-Inflammatory

Many people equate 'anti-inflammatory eating' with elimination — gluten-free, dairy-free, fruit-free, a 7-day juice cleanse. But the clinically supported anti-inflammatory diet is additive: more vegetables, fruit, whole grains, fish, olive oil, nuts. It does not remove entire food groups.

Elimination/detox diets have ① almost no RCT evidence, ② risk calcium, iron, B12, and fiber deficiencies, and ③ reinforce 'good food / bad food' dichotomies that worsen disordered eating. Without medical reason (celiac, diagnosed allergy), cutting whole groups is not recommended.

What to Actually Reduce

  • Added sugars: WHO advises under 10% of calories (ideally <5%); beverages dominate.
  • Ultra-processed foods: Monteiro's NOVA Class 4 — instant noodles, snacks, processed meats, cereal bars. Cohort studies consistently link to mortality, CVD, depression.
  • Excess omega-6: corn/soybean-oil-heavy Western diets sit at about 15:1 ω-6:ω-3 vs the ideal ~4:1.
  • Trans fats: effectively removed from the US food supply in 2018, but still in some fried/packaged items globally. Beware 'serving-size 0g' tricks.

Supplements Don't Replace Food

  • Omega-3 capsules: VITAL trial 2018 NEJM (n≈26,000) showed 1 g/day did not significantly cut major CV events overall, with possible MI protection. Two fish meals a week beat pills for consistency.
  • Curcumin/turmeric: strong mechanism, poor oral bioavailability. Black pepper (piperine) raises absorption ~20×, so curry + pepper is the practical form.
  • Vitamin D: VITAL found 2000 IU/day did not reduce CVD or cancer, and inflammation effects are inconsistent. If you are not deficient (<20 ng/mL), supplementing 'just because' lacks evidence.

Korean Food's Anti-Inflammatory Potential

Few Koreans will receive a free liter of olive oil weekly. Fortunately Korean cuisine already carries rich anti-inflammatory resources. Lee Ju-young (2018, Korean J Community Nutrition) and others argue Korean dietary patterns — vegetable-heavy, fermented, fish-inclusive — are inherently close to anti-inflammatory ideals.

  • Kimchi, doenjang, cheonggukjang: live microbes plus SCFA precursors; watch sodium.
  • Perilla seeds/oil: among the highest plant ω-3 (ALA) sources.
  • Chili: capsaicin is antioxidant; tolerance varies.
  • Garlic: allicin suppresses NF-κB and more.
  • Green tea: EGCG lowers CRP and LDL oxidation in many meta-analyses.
  • Mixed-grain rice and namul vegetables: a daily polyphenol and fiber payload.

Korea's Ministry of Health & Welfare and academic societies now emphasize vegetables, fruit, and fish while limiting refined grains, added sugar, and ultra-processed foods — effectively shaping a 'Korean Mediterranean' pattern.

Seven Things to Change This Week

  1. Swap one bowl of white rice for mixed grains + namul.
  2. Trade your afternoon drink for green tea.
  3. Eat mackerel or similar oily fish twice a week.
  4. Drizzle perilla or olive oil on vegetables.
  5. Replace one snack with a handful of nuts and fruit.
  6. Cut one ultra-processed item (one, not zero).
  7. Include one fermented food per main meal.

Two weeks tend to nudge LDL, CRP, and mood. Anti-inflammatory eating isn't a diet — it's a decades-long compounding habit. Change the next grocery cart, not just the next meal.

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Frequently asked questions

Can the Mediterranean diet be followed as-is in Korea?

Not literally, but the principles transfer. PREDIMED's core is ① abundant vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes, nuts, ② olive oil as main fat, ③ fish 2+ times weekly, ④ limited red/processed meat, ⑤ moderate wine (optional). In Korea, pair olive oil with perilla and sesame oils, swap whole grains for mixed-grain rice, and use mackerel-class oily fish. Kimchi and doenjang come as a fermented-food bonus. Lee Ju-young (2018) and other Korean researchers support the feasibility of a 'Korean Mediterranean' pattern.

Can omega-3 supplements replace fish?

Hard to recommend. VITAL 2018 *NEJM* (n≈26,000) found 1 g/day omega-3 did not significantly cut overall major CV events (some MI signal), and effects on cognition and depression markers were inconsistent. Eating fish twice a week, by contrast, is reliably linked in cohorts to lower CVD and mortality. Default to 'food first, supplements to fill gaps.' For specific indications (pregnancy, hypertriglyceridemia), discuss supplements with a clinician.

Is kimchi really anti-inflammatory? I'm worried about sodium.

Both true. Kimchi combines ① Lactobacillus-class probiotics, ② fermentation byproducts (SCFA precursors), ③ polyphenols from garlic, chili, ginger. Observational data link it to gut and metabolic markers. But **sodium is high** — a typical small dish (~50 g) carries 300+ mg. With hypertension or kidney issues, 'more' isn't the answer. A reasonable target: one small side daily, while cutting salty soups/stews to keep total sodium under WHO's 2 g goal. Dedicated anti-inflammatory RCTs are still few — 'promising but not definitive.'

Does anti-inflammatory eating really help depression? Can I replace meds with diet?

Yes, as an adjunct — not a replacement. SMILES (Jacka 2017 *BMC Med*) showed about 32% remission at 12 weeks vs 8% controls, but n=67 was small and participants continued standard care (meds/therapy) while diet was added. The supported claim is 'standard treatment + anti-inflammatory diet beats standard treatment alone.' For moderate-to-severe depression, medication and psychotherapy remain first-line; diet is a strong adjunct. Never stop medications unilaterally — discuss with your clinician.

What about short 'detox juice cleanse' diets?

Not recommended. The body already has a sophisticated detox system in liver, kidney, and gut. There are essentially no RCTs supporting that a few days of juice fasting 'removes toxins.' Short-term weight loss is mostly water and muscle; long-term risks include protein, B12, iron deficiency, gallstones, and rebound. Real anti-inflammatory eating works the opposite way — add and sustain. Filling 30% of your weekly grocery cart with vegetables, whole grains, and fish beats any 7-day 'new you' reset.

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