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Anti-inflammatory foods
Author(s) -
Luis Henrique Almeida Castro,
Geanlucas Mendes Monteiro,
Ygor Thiago Cerqueira de Paula,
Vanessa De Souza Ferraz,
Jessica Alves Ribeiro,
Dayane Aparecida Moisés Caetano Bottini,
Aline Ortega Soloaga,
Nelson Thiago Andrade Ferreira,
Tayla Borges Lino,
Flavia Soares Bezerra Okumoto Nery de Mello,
Juliana Vicente de Souza,
Fernanda Viana de Carvalho Moreto
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
deleted journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2411-2933
DOI - 10.31686/ijier.vol8.iss9.2641
Subject(s) - life expectancy , context (archaeology) , purchasing power , epidemiology , purchasing power parity , obesity , population , distribution (mathematics) , mortality rate , environmental health , demography , economics , medicine , geography , sociology , pathology , mathematical analysis , mathematics , archaeology , exchange rate , keynesian economics , macroeconomics
With the increase in life expectancy accompanied by the gradual decrease in the birth rate as well as the greater income distribution associated with the quantitative increase in the minimum wage above inflation and the increase in its purchasing power, today the Brazilian population shows a moment exactly opposite to that found in the last century both in epidemiological terms and in the nutritional pattern. Brazil is currently experiencing the same pattern of mortality as developed countries: the majority of chronic non-communicable diseases are the main cause of death associated with an established model of obesity and sedentarism. These factors incline the scientific community and health professionals to turn their efforts to find food solutions that ease this epidemiological picture and it is in this context that anti-inflammatory foods have gained prominence. The following describes the main compounds that fit this magnitude of effect and their mechanisms of action.

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