
19/07/2025
🤔What Is ?
👉Inflammation is a process by which your body's white blood cells and the things they make protect you from injury or infection from outside invaders, such as bacteria and viruses.
🤔How inflammation works
👌Chemicals from your body's white blood cells enter your blood or tissues. This raises the blood flow to the area of injury or infection. It can cause redness and warmth. Some of the chemicals cause fluid to leak into your tissues, resulting in swelling. This protective process may trigger nerves and cause pain.
Higher numbers of white blood cells and the things they make inside your joints can cause irritation, swelling of the joint lining, and loss of cartilage (cushions at the end of bones) over time.
🤔Inflammation Types
🫵Acute inflammation
This type is short-lived and goes away within hours or days. It's a response to an illness or injury. Your body sends inflammatory cells to the site of the problem so you can start recovering. Examples of things that can trigger acute inflammation include:
Cuts
Viral illnesses such as the flu
Bacterial infections such as strep throat
🤔Chronic inflammation
Chronic inflammation can last months or years, even after the thing that triggered the inflammation is gone. In certain diseases, your body's defense system -- your immune system -- triggers inflammation when there are no invaders to fight off. This process is involved in some types of arthritis, for instance. In these autoimmune diseases, your immune system acts as if regular body tissues are infected or somehow unusual and attacks them, causing damage.
🤔 Inflammation Causes
If you have acute inflammation, you may know exactly what caused it: an injury or a bacterial or viral illness. The causes of chronic inflammation can be harder to figure out. Among the things that can cause chronic inflammation are:
Lack of exercise
Chronic stress
Obesity
Too many unhealthy microbes in your gut
Too few healthy microbes in your gut
Poor sleep
Exposure to toxins, such as air pollution or dangerous chemicals
To***co use
Drinking too much alcohol
🤔Inflammatory diseases
Common inflammatory conditions include:
Neurological conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson's
Autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and psoriasis
Gastrointestinal conditions such as Crohn's disease, irritable bowel syndrome, and ulcerative colitis
Mental health disorders such as depression and anxiety
Cardiovascular issues such as high blood pressure and heart disease
Lung disease such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD)
Metabolic disorders such as type 2 diabetes
Certain cancers.
🤔Inflammation and arthritis
Some types of arthritis are the result of inflammation, such as:
Rheumatoid arthritis
Psoriatic arthritis
Gout
Osteoarthritis -- the most common type -- is a degenerative disorder, not an autoimmune disease. Think of it as a "wear and tear" issue.
🤔Inflammation Symptoms
A specific part of your body might be affected, or your symptoms might be more general.
Inflammation in joints
When a joint is affected, the symptoms include:
Redness
A swollen joint that may be warm to the touch
Joint pain
Joint stiffness
A joint that doesn’t work as well as it should Often, you’ll have only a few of these symptoms.
Flu-like symptoms
You might have symptoms that leave you generally feeling unwell. They can include:
Fever
Chills
Fatigue/loss of energy
Headaches
Loss of appetite
Muscle stiffness
Other symptoms
You also might have:
Pain in your belly
Rash on your skin
Diarrhea, constipation, or acid reflux
Sores in your mouth
Weight gain or loss
Depression, anxiety, or other mood disorders
🤔How inflammation affects your internal organs
Other symptoms of chronic inflammation depend on which organs are affected. For example:
Inflammation of your heart (myocarditis) may cause shortness of breath or fluid buildup.
Inflammation of the small tubes that take air to your lungs may cause shortness of breath.
Inflammation of your kidneys (nephritis) may cause high blood pressure or kidney failure.
You might not have pain with an inflammatory disease because some organs don’t have many pain-sensing nerves.
🤔How Is Inflammation Diagnosed?
If you seem to have chronic inflammation, your doctor will ask about your medical history and do a physical exam, focusing on:
The pattern of painful joints and whether there are signs of inflammation
Whether your joints are stiff in the morning
Any other symptoms
They’ll also look at the results of X-rays and blood tests for biomarkers such as:
C-reactive protein (CRP)
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)
Your doctor will look for ways to treat your inflammation symptoms and also any underlying causes.
Inflammation Treatment
Treatment for diseases that cause chronic inflammation may include medications, rest, exercise, and surgery to correct joint damage. Your treatment plan will depend on several things, including your type of disease, your age, the medications you’re taking, your overall health, and how severe the symptoms are.
The goals of treatment are to:
Correct, control, or slow down the disease process
Avoid or change activities that aggravate pain
Ease pain through pain medications and anti-inflammatory drugs
Keep joint movement and muscle strength through physical therapy
Lower stress on joints by using braces, splints, or canes as needed
🤔Can I reduce inflammation in my body quickly?
🫵For acute inflammation, you can:
Rest the affected part of your body
Apply ice to the spot that's sore
Keep any wounds -- cuts, scrapes, burns -- clean
There's no quick fix for chronic inflammation. But certain habits can help you manage it. Regular exercise can have anti-inflammatory benefits. You also can try eating more foods high in natural antioxidants.
🤔What does inflammation feel like?
🫵When it affects your joints, inflammation can cause pain and stiffness. The area might be red, warm to the touch, or swollen.
Sometimes inflammation causes symptoms that can feel like the flu -- headache, fatigue, fever, chills, or achy muscles.
🤔What are the most inflammatory foods?
There's no 10 Most Wanted List of inflammatory foods. But things you may want to avoid or limit include:
Red meat
Processed meats
Store-bought baked goods such as cakes, pies, brownies, and cupcakes
Bread and pasta made from white flour
Fried foods
Drinks sweetened with sugar
Foods with added sugar, such as jam or syrup
Foods with trans fats, such as margarine, microwave popcorn, and nondairy creamer
🤔Medications for inflammation
Many drugs can ease pain and swelling. They also may prevent or slow inflammatory disease. Doctors often prescribe more than one. The medications include:
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs, such as aspirin, ibuprofen, or naproxen)
Corticosteroids (such as prednisone)
Antimalarial medications (such as hydroxychloroquine)
Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), including azathioprine, cyclophosphamide, leflunomide, methotrexate, and sulfasalazine
Biologic drugs such as abatacept, adalimumab, certolizumab, etanercept, infliximab, golimumab, rituximab, and tocilizumab
Some of these also are used to treat conditions such as cancer or inflammatory bowel disease, or to prevent organ rejection after a transplant. But when chemotherapy types of medications (such as methotrexate or cyclophosphamide) are used to treat inflammatory diseases, they tend to have lower doses and less risk of side effects than when they’re prescribed for cancer treatment.
If your doctor prescribes any medication, it’s important that you meet with them regularly so they can watch for side effects.
✒️🩺 Lion DR RANA SANJAY PRATAP SINGH Dr Rana SP Singh, senior physician and diabetologist Patna Bihar India 🪷
DC - FIRST AID EDUCATION AND EMERGENCY RELIEF, LIONS CLUB INTERNATIONAL DISTRICT 322E