Elevating body temperature to reduce low-grade inflammation: a welcome strategy for those unable to exercise?
journal contribution
posted on 2020-08-04, 13:03 authored by Sven Hoekstra, Nicolette BishopNicolette Bishop, Christof LeichtChristof LeichtCopyright © 2020 International Society of Exercise and Immunology. All rights reserved. Chronic low-grade inflammation is increasingly recognized in the aetiology of a range of chronic diseases, including type 2 diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease, and may therefore serve as a promising target in their prevention or treatment. An acute inflammatory response can be induced by exercise; this is characterised by the acute increase in proinflammatory markers that subsequently stimulate the production of anti-inflammatory proteins. This may help explain the reduction in basal concentrations of pro-inflammatory markers following chronic exercise training. For sedentary populations, such as people with a disability, wheelchair users, or the elderly, the prevalence of chronic low-grade inflammation- related disease is further increased above that of individuals with a greater capacity to be physically active. Performing regular exercise with its proposed anti-inflammatory potential may not be feasible for these individuals due to a low physical capacity or other barriers to exercise. Therefore, alternatives to exercise that induce a transient acute inflammatory response may benefit their health. Manipulating body temperature may be such an alternative. Indeed, exercising in the heat results in a larger acute increase in inflammatory markers such as interleukin-6 and heat shock protein 72 when compared with exercising in thermoneutral conditions. Moreover, similar to exercise, passive elevation of body temperature can induce acute increases and chronic reductions in inflammatory markers and positively affect markers of glycaemic control. Here we discuss the potential benefits and mechanisms of active (i.e., exercise) and passive heating methods (e.g., hot water immersion, sauna therapy) to reduce chronic low-grade inflammation and improve metabolic health, with a focus on people who are restricted from being physically active.
Funding
National Institute for Health Research Leicester Biomedical Research Centre
History
School
- Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences
Published in
Exercise immunology reviewVolume
26Pages
42 - 55Publisher
International Society of Exercise and ImmunologyVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© 2020 International Society of Exercise and Immunology.Publisher statement
Reproduced with permission of the publisher.Publication date
2020-03-01ISSN
1077-5552Publisher version
Language
- en
Location
GermanyDepositor
Mr Sven Hoekstra . Deposit date: 3 August 2020Usage metrics
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