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Originally published at AARP.com By: Janis Jibrin January 17, 2020

Name any common disease associated with aging — cancer, dementia, heart disease, metabolic syndrome, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, type 2 diabetes — and chronic inflammation will play a role.

In a way, chronic inflammation is like too much of a good thing. After all, something such as your finger swelling around a cut means that immune cells are doing their job, rushing to the scene and spewing out inflammatory compounds that kill bacteria and prevent infection.

But chronic low-grade inflammation that persists for weeks, months or years is the disease-triggering variety. Again, it’s your immune cells in action. But instead of fighting foreign bacteria, they silently attack your own body — your blood vessels, brain cells and organs included.

It’s not entirely clear why this happens, though stress is known to raise levels of inflammatory compounds in the body — as does obesity, since fat cells parked deep in the belly emit inflammatory compounds when they reach a critical mass. Genetics is known to influence your susceptibility to inflammation.

But diet plays a very big role, too, — specifically, eating too much white flour, sugar and fried foods, and not enough fruit, vegetables and fish.

But if diet can cause inflammation, it can also make a real difference in fighting it.

For instance, closely following a Mediterranean-style diet was shown to reduce the odds of developing Alzheimer’s disease by 34 to 61 percent in one meta-analysis of 12 specific Mediterranean diet studies by researchers at Brown University’s Warren Alpert Medical School. Big declines in the rate of heart disease have also been seen in programs combining a similar diet with smoking cessation.

Below are foods that will rally to your defense; to work, they should form the base of your diet, which, yes, should look quite a bit like the traditional Mediterranean diet in order to get the most inflammation-busting benefit.

Fruits and vegetables
How they fight for you: Their arsenal of vitamins, minerals and thousands of phytonutrients (beneficial plant compounds) prevent and attack chronic inflammation on many fronts. Some, like the carotenoids that give carrots and tomatoes their hues, act as antioxidants, which keep potentially destructive molecules called “oxidants” in check. That’s critical to our well-being because, in excess, oxidants destroy cells, give rise to chronic inflammation and in other ways put us at risk for heart disease, cancer and other killers. Other phytonutrients, like the anthocyanins in blueberries, work more directly — putting the brakes on the production of inflammatory compounds, including those produced in the brain.

And there’s more! Fiber in produce becomes a feast for bacteria in your gut, which return the favor by producing anti-inflammatory substances. And by helping keep your weight down, fruits and vegetables help you skirt obesity-induced inflammation.

What to eat: All fruits and vegetables fight inflammation in some way. The following reliably pop up as protective in large-scale diet surveys: apples, berries, citrus fruit, pears, green leafy vegetables/salads, green/yellow vegetables (such as green beans and yellow peppers), cruciferous vegetables (like broccoli and cabbage) and tomatoes.

While many health organizations recommend five half-cup servings daily, some research studies suggest double that amount offers the most benefits.

And get this: Building on research showing that blueberries improve a rat’s memory, researchers gave men and women ages 60 to 75 an ounce of freeze-dried blueberries per day (equivalent to one cup of fresh) to add to their usual diet. Another group got a blueberry-colored placebo. Three months later, blueberry eaters performed significantly better on tests of memory and other types of thinking. The small study was done at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging and published in 2017.

Skimping on fruits and vegetables may have caused 5.6 million to 7.8 million premature deaths worldwide in 2013, according to a meta-analysis of 95 separate studies that was reported in a 2016 issue of the International Journal of Epidemiology.

Herbs and spices
How they fight for you: Like fruits and vegetables, they’re rich in vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients. For example, rosmarinic acid — found in rosemary, thyme and other herbs — is both an antioxidant and an anti-inflammatory.

What to eat: They all can be protective. Just to name a few: herbs such as basil, dill, oregano, parsley, rosemary, sage, tarragon and thyme, and spices such as black pepper, cinnamon, cumin, garlic, hot peppers, star anise and turmeric.

Without official guidelines on portions, just use them generously when making salads, dips, curries, stews, baked fish and chicken, and other dishes.

And get this: Oregano and rosemary reduce inflammation in lab animal studies. For example, in a University of Lisbon, Portugal, study, rats ingesting rosmarinic acid had 60 percent less swelling in their paws (in reaction to an irritant) than rats not receiving the supplement.

Compared with taking a placebo, ingesting 3 grams of ginger powder in capsule form for an eight-week period reduced fasting blood sugar levels by a significant 10 percent for 40 men and women with type 2 diabetes.

The study, reported in 2014 in Complementary Therapies in Medicine, found that ginger appears to improve the body’s sensitivity to the insulin, which, in turn, leads to better blood sugar control. One proposed mechanism: It suppresses inflammatory compounds emitted by fat cells; these can make the body less responsive to insulin.

Extra-virgin olive oil
How it fights for you: A staple of the healthy Mediterranean diet, extra-virgin olive oil (EVOO) was considered medicinal as far back as ancient Greece. While more than 200 compounds have been teased out of extra-virgin and virgin olive oil, it’s their anti-inflammatory phenolic compounds that appear to offer up the most potent health benefits.

What to eat: Buy extra-virgin olive oil that is pungent, even a little bitter, with that back-of-throat burn. That’s how you know you’re getting polyphenols.

While there are no U.S. guidelines on intake, the European Food Safety Authority recommends 20 grams (1 1/2 tablespoons) daily.

And get this: To examine the health effects of a Mediterranean diet on cardiovascular disease, nearly 6,000 participants were assigned to either a Mediterranean diet that included 4 tablespoons of extra-virgin olive oil daily, a Mediterranean diet with a daily serving of an ounce of nuts, or a low-fat control diet. Heart disease dropped dramatically in both Mediterranean diet groups — by 30 percent, compared with the control group on a low-fat diet.

Nuts and seeds
How they fight for you: Nuts (such as almonds, cashews and peanuts) and seeds (such as flax, pumpkin, sesame and sunflower) are rich in healthy fats and contain a bevy of antioxidants, which indirectly fight inflammation. Nuts help reduce LDL (“bad”) cholesterol, which is prone to free radical attack and inflammation. Nut eaters tend to weigh less than people who don’t eat nuts, probably because nuts and seeds are particularly satiating. Less body fat helps stave off inflammation.

What to eat: All nuts and seeds are healthy. Walnuts contain ALA — the plant form of omega-3 fats, which is anti-inflammatory. Walnuts, as well as pecans and baru nuts (a new import from South America) are particularly rich in antioxidants. There are no official U.S. guidelines for nut consumption, but research studies show heart and other health benefits at 1 to 1 1/2 ounces daily.

And get this: Nut eaters have better heart health than people who don’t eat nuts, concluded a 2018 review of the research by Loma Linda University scientists. They noted that that people who eat about 1 3/4 ounces of nuts daily show reduced levels of C-reactive protein, a marker of inflammation.

People who eat more nuts tend to weigh less, have smaller waistlines and are less likely to develop heart disease or metabolic syndrome (a cluster of risk factors such as high blood sugar, high blood pressure and excess fat deep in the abdomen, which raises risk for type 2 diabetes and heart disease).

Test tube studies show that sesamin, a phytonutrient in sesame seeds, is a potent cancer-fighter, thanks in part to its anti-inflammatory abilities.

Seafood and omega-3s
How they fight for you: Fish are the highest food source of two types of omega-3s: EPA and DHA. The American diet is woefully low in these fats, which not only prevent the formation of inflammatory compounds but also help destroy them. While scientists can’t say for sure why fish eaters tend to be healthier, omega-3s get at least some of the credit.

What to eat: Follow the American Heart Association’s recommendation to have at least two 3.5-ounce (cooked) servings of fish weekly. Your best bets are high in omega-3s but low in mercury: Arctic char, mackerel (Atlantic), rainbow trout, salmon and sardines.

And get this: Large-scale nutrition surveys find that fish eaters have a lower risk of developing heart disease, dementia and depression. Some, but not all, studies detected lower levels of inflammatory compounds in their blood.

One well-known Italian study that tracked more than 20,000 men and women age 35-plus for four years found that people who ate fatty fish at least four times a week were 40 percent less likely to develop heart disease. Fatty fish was particularly protective.

Averaging just 1.76 ounces of fish daily was linked to a 16 percent lower likelihood of having depression, according to a 2016 meta-analysis of 16 studies.

Whole grains
How they fight for you: Whole grains have all three components intact: the outer bran layer, the middle starchy endosperm and the little germ filled with vitamins and healthy fats. Refining gets rid of the most nutritious parts — the bran and germ — which offer a wealth of antioxidants. Whole grain’s fiber is fuel for our gut bacteria, which in turn produce anti-inflammatory substances.

What to eat: Brown rice, barley, bulgur wheat, millet and whole rye are all healthy — as are many other whole grains. (Buckwheat and quinoa, while technically not grains, are nutritionally close enough.) A serving of whole grain is about a half cup of cooked grains (such as brown rice, oatmeal, quinoa), a slice of bread or about half a cup to three-quarters of a cup of a flaky whole-grain cereal. While the Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommend that half your grains should be whole, other research indicates that an even higher proportion is better.

And get this: Compared with those who eat the least amount of whole grains, people who eat the most cut their risk of heart disease (by 21 percent), cancer (by 11 percent) and death (by 18 percent) over the course of the study period, according to a meta-analysis of 45 studies by researchers at Norwegian University of Science and Technology and other institutions.

In a separate study from Denmark, 50 overweight or obese men and women ate diets either rich in whole grains or devoid of them for eight weeks. Whole-grain eaters lost a little weight, and blood tests showed reduced levels of inflammation.

Legumes
How they fight for you: Legumes are rich in B vitamins, minerals and fiber. And like fruits and vegetables, they’re rich in phytonutrients, which act as antioxidants. Soy foods are particularly high in isoflavones, which have anti-inflammatory effects.

What to eat: All legumes are nutritious — black beans, chickpeas (garbanzo), kidney beans, lentils and the others. The latest edition of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans suggests eating 1 1/2 cups per week, although more is certainly healthy.

And get this: Eating legumes can help reduce the risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity and certain types of cancer, and doing so can also help to quell appetite, according to a review of the research by scientists at the University of Leeds, in the U.K., and other institutions.

A study that tracked 785 men and women age 70 and up for seven years — in four countries — found that of all the foods studied, legumes were most closely linked to longevity. Every 20 grams (about 2 tablespoons) of legumes eaten corresponded to an 8 percent reduced risk of death during the study period.

Coffee, tea, dark chocolate
How they fight for you: Like fruits, vegetables and other healthy plant foods, coffee tea and cocoa beans (the basis of chocolate) are rich in phytonutrients.

Just to name a few: Dark chocolate and tea are particularly rich in flavanols, while coffee is high in chlorogenic acid and diterpenes. All three contain caffeine, which appears to offer anti-inflammatory benefits for your brain. (Although in excess, it can make you jittery, induce heartburn and mess with your sleep!) Coffee has the most caffeine, followed by black tea, then green tea, which has about as much caffeine as an ounce of dark chocolate (70 to 85 percent cocoa).

What to eat (or drink): While major health authorities have not weighed in on ideal amounts, some research studies indicate that the following may offer protection.

Coffee: 1 to 3 cups (or espresso cups) of brewed coffee daily, ideally unfiltered (such as French press or espresso) as to not lose beneficial compounds.
Tea: White (unfermented), green (lightly fermented), oolong (medium fermentation) or black (fermented) are all beneficial. Studies vary in their recommended doses, but 1 to 5 cups seem to impart benefits.

Chocolate: In general, the darker the chocolate (70 percent or higher), the healthier — you get less sugar and more flavanols. However, the cocoa bean growing region and the way chocolate is processed has a big impact on flavanols. A Consumer Lab analysis found that some dark chocolates have four times the flavanols as others. About an ounce a day of dark chocolate is probably the sweet spot — not too high in calories, and, hopefully, rich in flavanols.

And get this: Compared with abstainers, coffee drinkers were 15 percent less likely to die over the course of three large studies. These Harvard University studies tracked about 208,000 men and women for 21 to 28 years, recording diet and health outcomes. Drinking coffee appeared to help ward off killer diseases such as heart disease, a number of cancer types, neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s, and it was also linked to a lower risk of suicide. Both regular and decaffeinated coffee appear to be protective. These findings mesh with other similar epidemiological research.

Tea drinkers tend to have a lower risk of heart disease. Why? A study by reseachers at Ochanomizu University in Tokyo, Japan, of 19 healthy men might help explain. An hour after taking a green tea supplement in pill form, their LDL (“bad”) cholesterol was significantly less prone to oxidation than before taking the capsule (or compared with when they returned to the lab and took a placebo). Oxidized LDL becomes inflamed and can lead to artery-clogging plaque — a major cause of heart disease and stroke.

Cocoa flavanols can relax arteries, improving blood flow to the heart and brain. They also can protect arteries from free radical damage and inflammation. That may be why some studies indicate that people who eat chocolate have a lower risk of heart disease and stroke.

Chocolate may also make us smarter, according to a Columbia University research study of 37 men and women in their 50s and 60s. Half of them added to their daily diet a daily chocolate drink that was high in cocoa flavanols, while the other group added a flavanol-poor chocolate beverage. Three months later, the high flavanol group’s scores on memory tests were equivalent to those of people 30 years younger. Brain scans showed improved blood flow to a region of the hippocampus — a part of the brain involved in memory.

Editor’s note: This article was original published on May 9, 2019 and updated on January 17, 2020 with the AARP Top Tips video.

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Could Decreasing Inflammation Be the Cure for Everything? https://optimyzi.com/could-decreasing-inflammation-be-the-cure-for-everything/ https://optimyzi.com/could-decreasing-inflammation-be-the-cure-for-everything/#respond Wed, 30 Mar 2022 20:51:29 +0000 https://optimyzi.com/2022/03/30/maintain-white-teeth-after-whitening-treatment/

Managing your body’s immune response is key to diseases of aging.
Originally published by Mike Zimmerman, AARP, Updated January 17, 2020

It hardly sounds serious at all. An inconvenience, perhaps, like maybe a mild fever or a creaky joint. In the lexicon of aging and disease, there are far more worrisome words: cancer, heart disease, dementia, diabetes. But researchers have suspected for years that all of these health issues, and more, have at their heart one common trigger: low-grade inflammation. And now they may finally have proof.

Cardiologists in Boston have reported on a clinical trial with more than 10,000 patients in 39 countries (mean age: 61) that tested to see if an anti-inflammatory drug could lower rates of heart disease. They discovered that it could. But they also found that the same drug, canakinumab, reduced lung cancer mortality more than 77 percent, and reports of gout and arthritis (conditions linked to inflammation) also fell.

“Inflammation plays a role in everyone’s health,” says Dana DiRenzo, a rheumatologist and instructor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. When inflammation levels increase, so does the risk of disease. But understanding inflammation can be tricky because, when you get a disease, inflammation levels naturally increase as your body fights the condition. Inflammation, in other words, is both good and bad.

Given how crucial this issue is to your health, AARP spoke with some of America’s top experts in the field, pored over the latest studies and created this guide to understanding — and overcoming — inflammation.

What exactly is inflammation?
Think about when you catch the flu and your body temperature rises to fight the virus. That’s a form of inflammation. So is the redness and swelling that occur when you sprain your ankle; it’s the process your body uses to provide the healing chemicals and nutrients needed to help repair the damage.

These are examples of acute inflammation, a temporary, helpful response to an injury or illness. Once the danger goes away, so does the inflammation.

Chronic inflammation, on the other hand, is a slow, creeping condition caused by a misfiring of the immune system that keeps your body in a constant, long-term state of high alert, says Robert H. Shmerling, clinic chief in the department of rheumatology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

It’s often the chronic inflammation, not the viruses themselves, that causes much of the damage.

Why is chronic low-grade inflammation a problem?
“Over time, inflammation damages healthy cells,” says Roma Pahwa, a researcher for the National Institutes of Health who specializes in the inflammatory response. Here’s why: When cells are in distress, they release chemicals that alert the immune system. White blood cells then flood the scene, where they work to eat up bacteria, viruses, damaged cells and debris from an infection or injury. If the damage is too great, they call in backup cells known as neutrophils, which are the hand grenades of the immune system — they blow up everything in sight, healthy or not. Each neutrophil has a short life span, but in chronic inflammation, they continue to be sent in long after the real threat is gone, causing damage to the healthy tissue that remains. The inflammation can start attacking the linings of your arteries or intestines, the cells in your liver and brain, or the tissues of your muscles and joints. This inflammation-caused cellular damage can trigger diseases like diabetes, cancer, dementia, heart disease, arthritis and depression.

And because it’s low grade, “its slow and secret nature makes it hard to diagnose in day-to-day life,” Pahwa says. “You have no idea it’s even happening until those conditions show symptoms.”

How can something natural to our bodies be so toxic to our health?
“It can be complicated to figure out if inflammation is friend or foe,” Pahwa says. Looking at the four main causes of chronic inflammation, however, sheds some light.

An outside infection that’s hard to kill: You contract a chronic infection like hepatitis C or Lyme disease that lingers in the body for a long time. Your body responds with inflammation that also lingers a long time. In fact, it’s often the chronic inflammation, not the viruses themselves, that causes much of the long-term damage related to these diseases.
Genetics: You inherit a genetic propensity toward a health issue. In some cases, the genes related to these health issues can be turned on by inflammation: Diabetes and cancer are two genetically related diseases that can be triggered by inflammation. In other cases, the gene itself causes a misfiring of the immune system that causes the inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, lupus and other diseases.
Environment: Pollution, air and water quality, environmental allergies and a host of other environmental factors can trigger and sustain inflammation.
Lifestyle: Obesity, unregulated stress, tobacco use, drinking too much, lack of physical activity, lousy sleep and, of course, poor diet are all linked to chronic inflammation.
And getting older increases inflammation, too?
Unfortunately, yes. The older we are, the more exposure we’ve had to stuff like environmental toxins, stress, alcohol, bad foods and chronic diseases. Plus, aging makes it more difficult for our bodies to properly manage our immune systems, to extract nutrients from food and to shed extra pounds. “There are thousands of articles in the science literature related to aging and inflammation,” says Thomas Buford, an associate professor with the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine’s division of gerontology.

So what makes chronic inflammation happen?
Chronic inflammation is a cascading effect of reactions in the body, Pahwa says. Here’s a (very) basic breakdown of what’s going on.

Something triggers the immune system. Whether it’s a chronic disease, an autoimmune disorder, weight gain, psychological stress, poor nutrition, exposure to chemicals or allergens — something puts your body in a state of stress and keeps it there.
The immune system responds. The body goes into attack mode with its inflammatory response, which also includes blood vessel expansion to increase blood flow to the problem areas. Blood is the primary delivery system for all these substances.
And responds … and responds … and responds. An endless cycle of pro-inflammatory foods, rampant stress, bad sleep and more keeps this process in constant motion because we never give the body a break.
There are “pro-inflammatory foods”?
Yes, and they’re the same foods you’ve been warned about by everyone from your dentist to your cardiologist. (And that’s no surprise, because gingivitis and sclerotic arteries are both inflammatory conditions.) Foods high in sugar or high in unhealthy fats (think deli meats and fried foods) are top of the list.

“We don’t fully understand it yet,” Buford says, “but now we know our gut microbiome, made up of trillions of bacteria, influences physiologic processes throughout the body.” We’re born with a balance between good and bad bacteria in the gut. When that balance is thrown off — known as dysbiosis — it can lead to trouble. “A disregulated microbiome has been associated with metabolic diseases, pulmonary diseases, nervous system conditions, Alzheimer’s — and these associations grow as we learn more and more,” Buford says.

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7 Sneaky Signs of Inflammation​ https://optimyzi.com/7-sneaky-signs-of-inflammation/ https://optimyzi.com/7-sneaky-signs-of-inflammation/#respond Wed, 30 Mar 2022 20:51:27 +0000 https://optimyzi.com/2022/03/30/bad-breath-causes-and-disease-diagnose/

Underlying a host of serious conditions, this off-course immune response can be easy to miss.

Originally Published on AARP.com October 18, 2021 /Updated November 17, 2022

Feeling wiped out. Random aches and pains. Frequent trips to the bathroom. What you might write off as signs of aging could be symptoms of chronic inflammation, which, if left untreated, can raise your risk of heart disease, dampen your immune system and leave you looking and feeling anything but your best.
Keep in mind that inflammation itself isn’t necessarily the villain; in fact, this downstream effect of the immune system can be a good thing. “It’s a normal part of physiology and your body’s response to anything dangerous,” says Robert Shmerling, M.D., a rheumatologist at Harvard Medical School and senior faculty editor at Harvard Health Publishing. When you’re exposed to something threatening, whether it’s pollutants in the air or cancer cells, your body releases inflammatory chemicals known as cytokines, which draw an army of white blood cells to the site. This is a short-term response, which disappears within hours, if not days.

But sometimes this inflammation persists or your body goes into overdrive to rid itself of something that it thinks is foreign that isn’t. In that case, your body is essentially attacking itself, Shmerling says. Lifestyle factors, such as a poor diet, being sedentary, smoking and drinking, and being overweight, can also cause inflammation.

Older adults are especially susceptible. “The aging process is not kind when it comes to inflammation — organs are less resilient to its effects, and as you age you’re more vulnerable to the insults of the outside world,” says Daniel Monti, M.D., the Ellen and Ron Caplan chair of the department of integrative medicine and nutritional sciences at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. As Monti explains, lifestyle habits that you could get away with when you were younger — not getting enough sleep, eating junk food, being exposed to constant stress — can take their toll and cause more inflammation as you age.

Here are seven signs of chronic inflammation to keep in mind.

1. Fatigue
A common misconception about aging often causes this red flag to be missed, notes Bindiya Gandhi, M.D., an integrative medicine specialist in Atlanta. “Many older adults think it’s normal to take naps in the afternoon as they age, but it really isn’t; it’s a warning sign that something’s going on underneath.”

One real cause, Gandhi says, may be decreased activation of the brain’s reward center, known as the basal ganglia, which are very vulnerable to the effects of pro-inflammatory compounds that the body makes. It also may be the result of prolonged, chronic stress. “Our body’s fight-or-flight response was designed for short-term use, like fighting off a lion in the jungle,” says Scott Kaiser, M.D., director of geriatric cognitive health for the Pacific Neuroscience Institute at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, California. But, as Kaiser points out, the lions of yesterday have been replaced by the constant stress of today, which sets off the continual release of hormones like cortisol that can trigger inflammation.

2. Muscle aches and joint pain
It’s normal to feel a little stiff when you first get up in the morning or after a tough workout. But if there’s no known cause for achy joints or muscles, or if pain lingers for days or even weeks, it could be a sign of chronic inflammation, Shmerling warns. The most likely culprit? Rheumatoid arthritis, a condition in which your immune cells begin to attack your joints — and one that often starts in your 60s. Along with physical exams and imaging, it can be diagnosed through blood tests that check for specific markers of inflammation, such as erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) or C-reactive protein (CRP).

3. Gastrointestinal issues
Your digestive tract is one of the first places where you may experience inflammation, Gandhi says. “Many older adults are on over-the-counter medications such as proton pump inhibitors, which can cause a lot of disruption to the bacteria in the gut,” she explains. “As a result, inflammatory compounds have an easier time entering the bloodstream, which can cause digestive problems like gas, bloating, diarrhea and/or constipation, as well as ongoing inflammation.” Your doctor can take a stool sample to check for calprotectin, a protein that indicates inflammation and that has been linked to inflammatory bowel disease.

4. Weight gain
Obesity itself can cause inflammation, since excess calories in the body stored within fat tissue can kick off the activation of immune cells. Over time, being in this metabolic inflammatory state causes other related conditions, such as high blood glucose levels, high cholesterol and elevated blood pressure, Shmerling says. While excess weight anywhere isn’t good, it’s particularly concerning if it’s clustered around your belly; this type of fat, known as visceral fat, pumps out immune system chemicals called cytokines that ramp up inflammation and raise the risk of cardiovascular disease.

The good news is that many of these inflammatory markers can be changed through diet, says Shmerling, who notes that the Mediterranean diet — rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts and healthy fats from sources like olive oil and fatty fish — is the most recommended. One 2018 study published in the journal Nutrients found that people who followed this type of plan had lower blood levels of inflammatory substances such as c-reactive protein.

Another good way to reduce inflammation — and lose weight in the process — is exercise. A 2021 study published in the journal Gut Microbes found that people who did 15 minutes of muscle strengthening exercises every day for six weeks had lower levels of inflammatory substances called cytokines in their blood compared to people who did nothing. They also had more “good” bacteria in their guts that produces anti-inflammatory substances.

5. Catching lots of bugs
When chronic inflammation causes your immune system to go out of whack, it may mistakenly attack your body’s own cells. While this can cause autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory bowel disease, it may also mean that your immune cells don’t respond as well to germ-y invaders such as cold and flu bugs, Kaiser says. As a result, you may find that you catch every cold that comes your way and that symptoms linger for weeks. Research shows, for instance, that people with rheumatoid arthritis are more likely to come down with the flu and experience complications from it.

6. Skin rashes
Chronic skin issues, such as psoriasis and eczema, can also signal overall inflammation in the body. “These are all inflammatory skin conditions that usually signal an over-reactive immune system,” Shmerling explains. That’s why it’s important to not just treat the skin disease itself but to adopt an anti-inflammatory lifestyle, as well, he adds. This can include following a Mediterranean diet, getting regular exercise, sleeping seven to eight hours a night, not smoking and managing stress through relaxation activities like deep breathing, meditation and yoga.

7. Low vitamin D levels
Low levels of the sunshine vitamin may be linked to chronic inflammation, according to a 2022 study published in the International Journal of Epidemiology. Researchers examined the genetic data of 294,970 people and found that those who had low vitamin D levels — defined as less than 25 nmol/L (nanomoles per liter) — also had high levels of C-reactive protein, a substance in the body that indicates inflammation. The researchers theorize if they boost vitamin D levels in people with deficiencies, it may help reduce chronic inflammation and related diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and autoimmune disorders.

The Best Anti-Inflammatory Foods
Editor’s Note: This story, originally published Oct. 18, 2021, has been updated to include new information.

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