Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), a major cause of morbidity and mortality in premature infants, occurs after the introduction of oral feedings in conjunction with initial bacterial colonization of the gut and is hypothesized to be due to an immature (inappropriate) enterocyte response to bacterial stimuli. To test this hypothesis, we compared the enterocyte IL-8 response to inflammatory stimuli
Curcumin is the active ingredient of turmeric. It is widely used as a kitchen spice and food colorant throughout India, Asia and the Western world. Curcumin is a major constituent of curry powder, to which it imparts its characteristic yellow colour. For over 4000 years, curcumin has been used in traditional Asian and African medicine to treat a wide variety of ailments. There is a strong current public interest in naturally occurring plant-based remedies and dietary factors related to health and disease. Curcumin is non-toxic to human subjects at high doses. It is a complex molecule with multiple biological targets and different cellular effects. Recently, its molecular mechanisms of action have been extensively investigated. It has anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and anti-cancer properties. Under some circumstances its effects can be contradictory, with uncertain implications for human treatment. While more studies are warranted to further understand these contradictions, curcumin holds promise as a disease-modifying and chemopreventive agent. We review the evidence for the therapeutic potential of curcumin from in vitro studies, animal models and human clinical trials.
Normal functioning of the immune system is crucial to the health of man, and diet is one of the major exogenous factors modulating individual immunocompetence. Recently, nutrition research has focused on the role of foods or specific food components in enhancing immune system responsiveness to challenges and thereby improving health and reducing disease risks. Assessing diet-induced changes of immune function, however, requires a thorough methodological approach targeting a large spectrum of immune system parameters. Currently, no single marker is available to predict the outcome of a dietary intervention on the resistance to infection or to other immune system-related diseases. The present review summarises the immune function assays commonly used as markers in human intervention studies and evaluates their biological relevance (e.g. known correlation with clinically relevant endpoints), sensitivity (e.g. within-and between-subject variation), and practical feasibility. Based on these criteria markers were classified into three categories with high, medium or low suitability. Vaccine-specific serum antibody production, delayed-type hypersensitivity response, vaccine-specific or total secretory IgA in saliva and the response to attenuated pathogens, were classified as markers with high suitability. Markers with medium suitability include natural killer cell cytotoxicity, oxidative burst of phagocytes, lymphocyte proliferation and the cytokine pattern produced by activated immune cells. Since no single marker allows conclusions to be drawn about the modulation of the whole immune system, except for the clinical outcome of infection itself, combining markers with high and medium suitability is currently the best approach to measure immunomodulation in human nutrition intervention studies. It would be valuable to include several immune markers in addition to clinical outcome in future clinical trials in this area, as there is too little evidence that correlates markers with global health improvement.Immune function: Marker: Diet: Human studies: Infections Task and objectivesThe major function of the immune system is to protect the body against infectious diseases. The immune system can be divided into innate and adaptive immunity. The immune system operates at the systemic as well as at the local level, which includes the mucosal tissue such as in the upper airways and the gut. A fundamental characteristic of the immune system is that it involves multiple, functionally differing cell types, which permit a large variety of defence mechanisms. Assessing the status of the immune system and its functionality therefore requires a thorough methodological approach targeting a large spectrum of immune †A draft version of this review was extensively discussed with experts from the fields of nutrition, (clinical) immunology, mucosal immunology, gastroenterology and immunotoxicology during a Workshop, organised by the European branch of the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI Europe), on 'Markers
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