TY - JOUR
T1 - Low-Grade Chronic Inflammation
T2 - a Shared Mechanism for Chronic Diseases
AU - Cifuentes, Mariana
AU - Verdejo, Hugo E.
AU - Castro, Pablo F.
AU - Corvalan, Alejandro H.
AU - Ferreccio, Catterina
AU - Quest, Andrew F.G.
AU - Kogan, Marcelo J.
AU - Lavandero, Sergio
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - Inflammation is an important physiological response of the organism to restore homeostasis upon pathogenic or damaging stimuli. However, the persistence of the harmful trigger or a deficient resolution of the process can evolve into a state of low-grade, chronic inflammation. This condition is strongly associated with the development of several increasingly prevalent and serious chronic conditions, such as obesity, cancer, and cardiovascular diseases, elevating overall morbidity and mortality worldwide. The current pandemic of chronic diseases underscores the need to address chronic inflammation, its pathogenic mechanisms, and potential preventive measures to limit its current widespread impact. The present review discusses the current knowledge and research gaps regarding the association between low-grade chronic inflammation and chronic diseases, focusing on obesity, cardiovascular diseases, digestive diseases, and cancer. We examine the state of the art in selected aspects of the topic and propose future directions and approaches for the field.
AB - Inflammation is an important physiological response of the organism to restore homeostasis upon pathogenic or damaging stimuli. However, the persistence of the harmful trigger or a deficient resolution of the process can evolve into a state of low-grade, chronic inflammation. This condition is strongly associated with the development of several increasingly prevalent and serious chronic conditions, such as obesity, cancer, and cardiovascular diseases, elevating overall morbidity and mortality worldwide. The current pandemic of chronic diseases underscores the need to address chronic inflammation, its pathogenic mechanisms, and potential preventive measures to limit its current widespread impact. The present review discusses the current knowledge and research gaps regarding the association between low-grade chronic inflammation and chronic diseases, focusing on obesity, cardiovascular diseases, digestive diseases, and cancer. We examine the state of the art in selected aspects of the topic and propose future directions and approaches for the field.
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U2 - 10.1152/physiol.00021.2024
DO - 10.1152/physiol.00021.2024
M3 - Review article
C2 - 39078396
AN - SCOPUS:85209598305
SN - 1548-9213
VL - 40
SP - 0
JO - News in Physiological Sciences
JF - News in Physiological Sciences
IS - 1
ER -