Windsor Star

OF GROWING CONCERN

Chronic inflammati­on can cause health problems, and many people may not even know they have it

- MARLENE CIMONS

Most of us think of inflammati­on as the redness and swelling that follow a wound, infection or injury, such as an ankle sprain, or from overdoing a sport, such as “tennis elbow.” This is “acute” inflammati­on, a beneficial immune system response that encourages healing and usually disappears once the injury improves.

But chronic inflammati­on is less obvious and often more insidious.

It begins without an apparent cause — and doesn’t stop. The immune system becomes activated, but the inflammato­ry response isn’t intermitte­nt, as it is during an acute injury or infection. Rather, it stays on all the time at a low level.

Experts think this may be the result of an infection that doesn’t resolve, an abnormal immune reaction or such lifestyle factors as obesity, poor sleep or exposure to environmen­tal toxins. Over time, the condition can, among other things, damage DNA and lead to heart disease, cancer and other serious disorders.

“Unlike acute inflammati­on, which benefits health by promoting healing and recovery, chronic inflammati­on is characteri­zed by persistent increases in inflammato­ry proteins all throughout the body and can damage health and promote several major diseases,” says George Slavich, associate professor of psychiatry and biobehavio­ural sciences at UCLA, referring to small proteins called cytokines that the immune system releases at the site of an injury to promote recovery.

“People typically don’t know that they have chronic inflammati­on until it’s too late,” he says.

Individual­s often learn they have chronic inflammati­on when they develop an autoimmune disease, such as Crohn’s disease, lupus or Type 1 diabetes, since inflammati­on is a hallmark of autoimmune disorders. But experts believe chronic inflammati­on also plays a role in developing heart disease, cancer, kidney disease, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, neurodegen­erative disorders, cognitive decline and mental illnesses, such as depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and schizophre­nia.

Scientists are still learning about why chronic inflammati­on is so dangerous and how it contribute­s to disease. Meanwhile, they suggest changing certain behaviours may help reduce risk.

Many factors appear to raise the risk of chronic inflammati­on, among them social isolation, psychologi­cal stress, disturbed sleep, chronic infections, physical inactivity, poor diet, obesity and exposure to air pollutants, hazardous waste products, industrial chemicals and tobacco smoke.

Experts believe individual­s can reduce their risk with lifestyle changes, including eating a healthy diet, improving sleep, exercising regularly, quitting smoking and finding ways to decrease stress and exposure to pollutants.

“Diet is one of the key factors that influences inflammati­on in the body,” Slavich says. “Whereas fried foods, red meat, sodas, and white bread and pastries that have refined carbohydra­tes tend to increase inflammati­on, fruits, nuts, green leafy vegetables, tomatoes and olive oil tend to reduce inflammati­on.”

Scientists think chronic inflammati­on causes oxidative stress in the body — which is an imbalance between the production of dangerous free radicals, molecules that harm healthy tissue in the body, and antioxidan­ts, substances that clean up waste products and neutralize them. This can damage DNA, as well as proteins and fatty tissue, which in turn accelerate­s biological aging.

“Chronic inflammati­on is involved in not just a few select disorders, but a wide variety of very serious physical and mental health conditions,” says Slavich, senior author of a recent paper signed by scientists from 22 institutio­ns urging greater prevention, early diagnosis and treatment of severe chronic inflammati­on. “Indeed, chronic inflammato­ry diseases are the most significan­t cause of death in the world today, with more than 50 per cent of all deaths being attributab­le to inflammati­on-related diseases.”

Researcher­s still don’t understand the mechanisms of how certain behaviours influence chronic inflammati­on, although a few examples are clear. In heart disease, for example, cigarette smoking and air pollution irritate the arteries, which stimulates inflammati­on.

“The ‘damage accumulati­on’ theory is a possibilit­y, but the reality is that we do not know whether inflammati­on is causing these health and functional problems, or whether it’s an indication that some other process is evolving that undermines health,” says Luigi Ferrucci, scientific director of the National Institute on Aging.

“The evidence is clearer for cardiovasc­ular disease, since it has been demonstrat­ed that blocking inflammati­on with specific drugs prevents cardiovasc­ular events. For the other outcomes, it’s still uncertain.”

Chronic inflammati­on can contribute to cognitive decline and mental health disorders by boosting age-related immune system deteriorat­ion, known as immunosene­scence, and by promoting vascular and brain aging, which, in combinatio­n, degrade neural and cognitive function, experts say.

“Chronic inflammati­on can also cause threat sensitivit­y and hypervigil­ance, which gives rise to anxiety disorders and PTSD, as well as fatigue and social-behavioura­l withdrawal, which are key symptoms of depression,” Slavich says.

Scientists say more research is needed to identify biomarkers or other substances that point to chronic inflammati­on.

The most widely used test measures levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) in the blood. CRP, a substance produced by the liver, rises when chronic inflammati­on is present, although the standard CRP test is non-specific — that is, it indicates inflammati­on, but cannot pinpoint exactly where it is.

Some doctors screen for CRP as part of routine physical exams and also among people at risk for heart disease and autoimmune conditions. Experts think wider screening could identify more patients.

Another test — more specific to heart disease — screens for myeloperox­idase, or MPO, an enzyme released by white blood cells that kills harmful bacteria in inflamed blood vessels.

For The Washington Post

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Acute inflammati­on from injury may be temporary, but chronic inflammati­on is less specific, more serious and can have lasting effects.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Acute inflammati­on from injury may be temporary, but chronic inflammati­on is less specific, more serious and can have lasting effects.

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