The associations between diet diversity during infancy and atopic disease in later life : Systematic review
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Abstract
Background: and objective: The incidence of allergic diseases remains high, and many studies have focused on the association between food diversity in infancy and allergic diseases later in life, but their conclusions are still controversial. We aimed to synthesize the literature on the association between childhood diet diversity and atopic diseases. Methods: : We searched the PubMed, Cochrane Library, Embase, Scopus, VPCS, and Wanfang databases for studies about food diversity and atopic disease. Seventeen high-quality studies, 15 cohort studies and 2 case‒control studies, were included from 5244 studies with sample sizes ranging from 257 to 5225. Results: : All high-quality cohort studies showed that increasing food diversity in infancy can effectively prevent the occurrence of food allergies (6/6). Moderate evidence showed that increased food diversity reduced the risk of asthma (4/7), food sensitization (3/6) and atopic dermatitis (3/5). However, its effect on eczema (7), allergic rhinitis (4), and other diseases remains controversial. Conclusions: : Increasing food diversity during infancy is a potential method for preventing food allergies, asthma, atopic dermatitis and food sensitization later in life. There is little or no comparative evidence about the protective effect of food diversity on other atopic diseases.
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