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Healthcare · §633
Inflammaging
The version of older that everyone seems to brace for — dragging afternoons, the lightly-unwell background hum, the long climb out of anything that knocks you down, a face that looks tired by Tuesday — is partly something else. A low, steady fire runs in your immune system from somewhere around forty: chronic inflammation that climbs by the decade and shows up in a routine blood draw as IL-6 and hs-CRP. It is the upstream most of the longevity literature already routes through — the reason exercise, sleep, weight, Mediterranean eating, and a real social life keep showing up in the same papers as the same effect. Cool the fire, and the sixties you haven't had yet bend: slower muscle loss, fewer cardiac events, sharper head, a body you stand up from a chair without thinking about it.
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The biggest organising idea in the longevity literature, and the one most reads skip past, is that the chronic diseases that take people in their seventies share a quiet upstream — and there is a single blood number that tracks it. The test costs about as much as a lunch. The interventions that move it are the ones already familiar to anyone who reads health writing, and the win here is mainly that they stop feeling like a dozen separate chores and start feeling like one job.

What this actually is: a small, persistent immune-system activity hum that climbs not because anything is acutely wrong, but because the sources of background inflammation accumulate over decades. Some of it comes from inside cells that should have retired but didn't — they linger in tissue and leak chemical signals that recruit more inflammation, a process called cellular senescence. A larger share comes from visceral fat — the deeper, organ-wrapped kind around your middle — which behaves almost like an organ that produces inflammation, with immune cells clustering around dying fat cells and quietly releasing IL-6 into the blood all day Visser 1999. Some comes from chronic, low-level viral company you've kept since your twenties — most adults carry cytomegalovirus, and the immune system permanently parks a large chunk of itself on keeping that virus quiet, with inflammatory side-effects Pereira & Akbar 2016.

Some comes from places people don't connect to inflammation at all. Untreated gum disease leaks bacteria and inflammatory by-products into the bloodstream continuously, and shows up in the same dementia and cardiovascular numbers Beydoun 2020. Short sleep raises IL-6 the next morning, and two weeks of six-hour nights nudges your baseline hs-CRP upward Irwin 2016. Chronic loneliness, social-evaluative threat, and long-running stress show up as a specific shift in which genes your white blood cells are reading — a pattern that flips toward inflammation and away from anti-viral defence, replicated in lonely, bereaved, and low-status humans Cole 2015. The list of drivers is, almost exactly, the list of levers.

The blood number that tracks all of it

Two markers do most of the work. hs-CRP — the high-sensitivity version of C-reactive protein — is a single number from a routine blood draw that integrates a lot of underlying inflammation into one signal. IL-6, the cytokine that drives much of that CRP rise, is harder to measure consistently across labs. The CDC and the American Heart Association turned hs-CRP into a risk classifier two decades ago, with the brackets still in working use: under 1 mg/L is low risk, 1 to 3 is intermediate, above 3 is high Pearson 2003.

The line that anchored the field came from a trial called JUPITER: 17,802 adults with apparently normal cholesterol but elevated CRP were randomised to a statin or a placebo; cardiovascular events fell by 44%, with parallel falls in CRP Ridker 2008. An inflammatory marker, by itself, had picked out a treatable population. The harder question — is the inflammation itself doing the damage, or just travelling with the cholesterol? — got its answer ten years later.

What runs through that number

The reason this matters past your heart is that the same low fire runs almost everything else that slows people down later. The friend who carries a high CRP through her forties is the friend who, in her sixties, gets up from the couch differently — small at first, then less small. She is the one who eventually stops doing the trip with the grandchildren because the recovery week has gotten too long. She is the one whose conversations get a little slower across her seventies; later, the one her family starts watching to make sure she eats.

Adults in the top quarter of CRP and IL-6 in the Cardiovascular Health Study were two to three times more likely to be frail; in the Health ABC study, the same group lost muscle mass and grip strength faster over five years Walston 2002, Schaap 2009. They scored measurably worse on cognitive tests at baseline and declined faster Yaffe 2003. They were more likely to be depressed — and not in a soft, correlational way: when researchers give healthy volunteers a single dose of an inflammatory cytokine, the same low-mood, low-motivation, no-appetite pattern shows up within hours Howren 2009, Capuron & Miller 2011. They died sooner: in one early study of 65-plus adults, people high on both markers had about 2.6 times the all-cause mortality of those low on both, over less than five years of follow-up Harris 1999.

The image of late life that most people brace for — the slowing, the smaller world, the rooms that contract inward in your seventies and eighties — is in large part this single number running unaddressed for forty years. It isn't fixed by the candles on your cake. People who reach 100 in the long-life regions of Sardinia and Okinawa often carry inflammation closer to a thirty-year-old's Franceschi 2018.

What actually moves the number

The interventions that shift inflammaging are not exotic — they're the longevity backbone everyone has already heard about, now organised under one upstream. Ranked roughly by how much each one shifts CRP:

  • Drop visceral fat — the deep, organ-wrapped kind around your middle. A 5–10% body-weight loss drops hs-CRP by roughly 25–30%; the deep fat is itself an inflammation-producing tissue Visser 1999.
  • Move most days — both aerobic and resistance. Around 150 minutes of moderate movement a week shifts basal CRP down by 20–40% in cohort data; working muscle releases IL-6 acutely in a way that drives anti-inflammatory downstream signals, which is why exercise lowers the chronic flame without "boosting" the immune system Petersen & Pedersen 2005, Pedersen 2012.
  • Sleep seven to nine hours, regularly. A single short night raises IL-6 the next morning; restoring sleep moves CRP within weeks Irwin 2019.
  • Eat a Mediterranean-style pattern — olive oil, fish, lots of plants, modest wine, very little ultra-processed food. The largest dietary trial for hard cardiovascular events, PREDIMED, cut major cardiac events by about 30% over five years on a Mediterranean diet supplemented with olive oil or nuts PREDIMED 2018; the inflammation-marker reductions track the whole pattern, not single magic foods Bonaccio 2017.
  • Treat the gum disease. Scaling and cleaning reduce CRP measurably; untreated periodontitis is a chronic systemic inflammation source that also shows up in the dementia numbers Beydoun 2020.
  • Quit smoking. CRP returns most of the way toward never-smoker levels over about five years.
  • Protect connection. Chronic loneliness and unresolved threat shift the same inflammation-tilted gene-reading pattern in white blood cells that bereavement and long-term low SES produce; resolving them reverses the shift Cole 2015.

What most coverage gets wrong

Inflammation is always bad. It isn't. Acute inflammation is how cuts heal, how a sprained ankle repairs, how a vaccine works. The trouble is the chronic, slow-burning, sterile version — the kind that never resolves and never produces a fever. Chronic NSAID use to chase the distinction blunts the wrong thing and stacks gut bleeding and kidney risk on top.

Eat "anti-inflammatory foods" and you're done. The shifts from turmeric, ginger, tart cherry, and the supplement-store anti-inflammatories are small compared with the shifts from the underlying pattern: how much you weigh, how much you move, how you sleep, whether your gums bleed. Sitting on a high visceral-fat load and a five-hour sleep average while chasing the marker with a curcumin capsule is the most common version of doing the wrong thing.

"Anti-inflammatory diet" means cutting nightshades, gluten, or dairy. Not really. The robust dietary signal is for Mediterranean-pattern adherence; the food-elimination versions of "anti-inflammatory eating" are mostly weak-evidence constructions built around personal anecdote Bonaccio 2017, Wirth 2017.

Inflammaging is inevitable. The two- to four-fold rise in IL-6 and CRP between thirty and eighty is the average; the spread inside any age band is wide, and lifestyle moves you within it Franceschi 2018.

Where this goes wrong in practice

The pattern that ruins inflammaging work for most people: chase the marker instead of the levers. A reader gets a high hs-CRP, takes turmeric and fish oil, retests in three months, sees a small drop, declares success, and never addresses the visceral fat, the broken sleep, or the chair-and-screen day that produced the number in the first place. The number drifts back up; the underlying trajectory hasn't moved.

Two other versions to watch for. Treating a single high CRP reading taken during a head cold or a stomach bug as a baseline — any value above 10 mg/L should be re-checked in two to four weeks, because the marker reads acute illness just as well as chronic inflammaging. And stacking unsupervised anti-inflammatory drugs to drive the number lower: canakinumab and colchicine work, but they raise serious infection risk and belong in a clinician's office, not a wellness routine.

Getting your number

The test to ask for is hs-CRP — the high-sensitivity version of C-reactive protein. It runs $15–30 self-pay in the US and is bundled into many routine panels at no extra charge. The brackets from the 2003 CDC/AHA statement are still the working ones Pearson 2003: under 1 mg/L is low risk, 1 to 3 is intermediate, above 3 is high, and anything above 10 should be re-checked two to four weeks later because it almost always means you had a current infection or injury when you drew. Take two readings two to four weeks apart and average them; within-person CRP wobbles enough that one number can mislead. Re-test every six to twelve months to track a real trend rather than a blip.

IL-6 measurement is less consistent across labs and costs more, and for most readers it adds little on top of CRP. The neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, which falls out of any standard complete blood count, is a cheaper second line if you want one.

Who reads the number differently

A few groups don't sit at the same CRP for the same body. Pre-menopausal women run slightly higher CRP than men at the same BMI; the difference reverses after menopause as visceral fat redistributes Mauvais-Jarvis 2018. Oral contraceptives and oestrogen therapy raise CRP without raising the rest of the inflammation panel — interpret accordingly. Pregnancy elevates CRP substantially; the standard brackets don't apply.

South Asian and East Asian readers reach high CRP at lower BMI thresholds because they carry more visceral fat per unit of weight; track waist circumference, not BMI. Anyone with diagnosed autoimmune disease, recent surgery, or active infection should not use CRP as an inflammaging readout — it's measuring something else.

The single most underestimated determinant of where in the population spread an adult sits, after body composition and sleep, is chronic social stress. Lower socioeconomic position correlates with higher CRP across cohorts; long-running loneliness shifts the inflammation-tilted gene-reading pattern in white blood cells in the same direction as bereavement and unemployment, and resolving the underlying stressor reverses it Cole 2015. A lot of what looks like inflammaging is inflam-something-going-on-in-your-life.

What changes when the fire cools

The first wave lands in weeks to months. The chronic background-tired, lightly-unwell hum lifts. The afternoon stops feeling like the second half of a fight. Minor colds clear faster and you spend fewer days a year vaguely unwell. The skin in the morning looks less puffy, less dull. The mood floor rises in the specific way that cytokine-driven low mood lifts — quietly, without you noticing the exact afternoon it stopped being there Capuron & Miller 2011, Howren 2009. Most readers attribute the change to whatever they happened to start doing — the new diet, the new gym block, the sleep — rather than to the marker underneath. That's fine; the marker is the framework, not the credit.

The second wave is the one that bends your sixties and seventies. Health ABC participants in the low-inflammation group kept their muscle mass and grip strength longer; Cardiovascular Health Study participants in the same group were less frail at five years; Yaffe's Health ABC cognition data showed they declined more slowly Schaap 2009, Walston 2002, Yaffe 2003. They had fewer cardiac events — CANTOS, JUPITER, and the colchicine trials all push the same direction with different tools Ridker 2017, Ridker 2008.

The composite picture is the version of your future where the trip with the grandchildren still happens. Where the second career is on the table at sixty-five because the head is still on the table. Where you stand up from a chair at seventy without thinking about it, and the second half of your life looks like the first. The forecast is not a promise of a particular number; it is the picture of what becomes available.

Where to go next

This is the upstream frame. The actual protocols live next door — each lever earns its own entry, where the dose and the catches are worked out properly: Mediterranean-style eating, strength and aerobic training, sleep duration, periodontitis treatment, omega-3 fatty acids, visceral-fat reduction, and the social-connection literature. The pharmacological inflammation-lowering conversation — statins beyond cholesterol, low-dose colchicine in chronic coronary disease, GLP-1 agonists — belongs in a clinician's office, with the relevant entries pointing into it. Senolytics, the still-experimental drugs that try to clear the senescent cells that secrete inflammation directly, are worth watching but not yet ready for a do-this protocol.

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