10 Ways to Slow ‘Inflammaging’ (the Inflammation That Happens With Aging)

Staff
By Staff
13 Min Read
Aging isn’t just what you see in the mirror — it’s also about what’s happening beneath the surface. Low-grade inflammation (low levels of slow, long-term damage to healthy body tissues) throughout the body can often build unnoticed as you age, leading to what experts have called “inflammaging.” It’s an issue linked to multiple aging-related diseases, such as heart disease, cognitive decline, and cancer.

“Inflammaging is generally defined as the combination of ‘inflammation + aging,’ or a chronic pro-inflammatory state that emerges as we get older, resulting from self-perpetuating cycles of tissue damage, host response, and immune dysregulation,” says Thomas McDade, PhD, a professor of medical social sciences at Northwestern University in Chicago who has researched inflammaging.

Unlike acute inflammation, which is your body’s short-term, helpful response to an injury or infection, inflammaging persists and accumulates over time, gradually wearing down tissues and bodily systems and potentially contributing to disease.

While you can’t stop the clock, research suggests that lifestyle habits like diet, exercise, sleep, stress management, and social connection may keep age-related inflammation in check.

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