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Anti-inflammatory diets show mental health benefits in adults, with most consistent improvements in depressive symptoms.

Anti-inflammatory diets show mental health benefits in adults, with most consistent improvements in …
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Key Takeaway
Consider anti-inflammatory diets for depressive symptoms in adults with existing mental health issues, but note mixed anxiety findings and heterogeneity.

This scoping review analyzed 42 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and 23 systematic evidence syntheses, involving 21,923 records identified, focusing on adults. The intervention was anti-inflammatory dietary patterns, including Mediterranean and DASH diets, compared with controls, with primary outcomes covering mental health aspects such as depressive symptoms, anxiety, mood, stress, and quality of life.

Main results indicated that 28 of the 42 RCTs reported significantly greater improvements in mental health outcomes compared with controls. Improvements were most consistently observed for depressive symptoms, while findings for anxiety were heterogeneous and less consistent. Across systematic evidence syntheses, depression outcomes generally showed positive associations with reduced risk or symptom severity.

Safety and tolerability data were not reported in the review. Key limitations include heterogeneity in dietary interventions, multimodal study designs, populations, and outcome measures, which may affect generalizability and comparability of findings. Funding or conflicts of interest were also not reported.

Practice relevance suggests that benefits are most consistently observed among individuals with existing mental health symptoms. However, interpretation is limited, and future research is needed to strengthen causal inference, as findings for anxiety and other outcomes were mixed, and evidence for depression, while generally positive, involves heterogeneity. Avoid overstating causal inference or underlying mechanisms.

Study Details

Study typeMeta analysis
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Inflammation has been proposed as a biological pathway linking diet to mental health. Anti-inflammatory dietary patterns, including the Mediterranean and DASH diets, may reduce systemic inflammation and thereby influence mental health outcomes. However, evidence across study designs has not been comprehensively synthesized. This scoping review aimed to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and systematic evidence syntheses to summarize the effects of anti-inflammatory dietary interventions or patterns on mental health outcomes in adults. Searches were conducted in scientific databases through February 2025. Eligible RCTs included adult participants receiving an anti-inflammatory dietary intervention with reported mental health outcomes. Eligible systematic evidence syntheses included systematic reviews with or without meta-analysis, scoping reviews, and umbrella reviews examining associations between anti-inflammatory diets and mental health. Article screening and review were conducted in duplicate, and data extraction followed standardized procedures appropriate for each study type. A total of 21,923 records were identified, of which 42 RCTs and 23 systematic evidence syntheses met the inclusion criteria. Of the 42 RCTs, 28 reported significantly greater improvements in at least one mental health outcome compared with controls following an anti-inflammatory dietary intervention. Most trials evaluated Mediterranean diet-based interventions. Across RCTs, improvements were most consistently observed for depressive symptoms, while findings for anxiety, mood, stress, and quality of life were mixed. Across the 23 systematic evidence syntheses, findings for depression outcomes were generally positive, with multiple reviews reporting inverse associations between adherence to anti-inflammatory dietary patterns and depression risk or symptom severity. Evidence for anxiety outcomes across reviews was more heterogeneous and less consistent. Anti-inflammatory dietary patterns, particularly the Mediterranean diet, are associated with improvements in depressive symptoms across randomized controlled trials and systematic evidence syntheses, with less consistent findings for anxiety and other mental health outcomes. Benefits were most consistently observed among individuals with existing mental health symptoms. Interpretation is limited by heterogeneity in dietary interventions, multimodal study designs, populations, and outcome measures. Future research using standardized dietary protocols, longer follow-up periods, and biomarker assessment is needed to strengthen causal inference and clarify underlying mechanisms.
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