Health News Update: Aging, Inflammation and Immune Resilience
New Title
Health News Update: Aging, Inflammation and Immune Resilience 2.23.26
Hello once again: Aging is also now known as inflammaging, and a recent research paper highlights this link. While it is really complex, the take home message should be pretty clear:
“In summary, our research identifies IR (Immune Resilience) degradation as an age-independent, inflammatory stress-dependent accelerator of aging phenotypes. We advance understanding of lifespan limits through our framework, demonstrating the necessity of preserving health-promoting IR mechanisms (salutogenesis) and countering disease drivers (pathogenesis).”
“Failed salutogenesis—the inability to sustain health-promoting mechanisms under stress—occurs when inflammatory stressors trigger a shift to extreme IR-degrader status…. This creates a dual state of proinflammatory activation and immunodeficiency, increasing susceptibility to infections, comorbidities, and mortality…our findings indicate that inflammatory stress—rather than aging itself—primarily drives this phenotypic shift.”
Bottom Line: These authors point out that the strategy for optimal aging is to promote a low inflammatory state to preserve immune resilience…the ability to not only prevent illness but to bounce back as needed. They promote the need to shift from disease models to health optimization models. Their research highlights that those that age up beyond their 70’s with preserved immune resilience live longer with fewer diseases and/or conditions.
But the highlight of this study was in that statement that inflammatory stress, rather than aging itself, is what primarily drives the shift to the loss of immune resilience and thus inflammaging and poor health outcomes and early death. By keeping your inflammatory burden low, you can add 15 years to your healthspan and lifespan!
Now you can see why I keep writing about a low inflammatory food plan and why it is crucial to live an anti-inflammatory lifestyle. You can do that by optimizing when you eat, what you eat, how you move, how well you sleep, and how you handle stress. Create a plan to optimize each of those 5 pillars of health…and you can do this by adding just one improved habit per month…in a year you will be in a much better place with your health and your future




