Fitness Reduces Inflammation, Study
Suggests
Science Daily
— Although a number of
studies have suggested that regular exercise reduces inflammation – a
condition that is predictive of cardiovascular and other diseases, such as
diabetes – it’s still not clear whether there is a definitive link.
And if such a link exists, the nature of the relationship is by no means fully
understood.

Jeffrey A. Woods,
professor of kinesiology and community health, and Victoria J. Vieira, a
predoctoral fellow in kinesiology and community health and in nutritional
sciences, are co-authors of a new study. Their research may help explain some
of the underlying biological mechanisms that take place as a result of regular
exercise. (Credit: L. Brian Stauffer)
A
recent study by kinesiology and community health researchers at the University
of Illinois provides new evidence that may help explain some of the underlying
biological mechanisms that take place as the result of regular exercise.
According to the researchers, that knowledge could potentially lead to a better
understanding of the relationship between exercise and inflammation.
The objective of their
research was to examine the independent effect of parasympathetic tone –
in this case, determined by assessing heart-rate recovery after exercise
– on circulating levels of C-reactive protein (CRP). Parasympathetic tone
and its inverse function – sympathetic tone – are components of the
autonomic nervous system. CRP, which is secreted by the liver, circulates in
the bloodstream and is a biomarker for inflammation in the body.
“The sympathetic
nervous system speeds things up, and the parasympathetic slows things
down,” said Victoria J. Vieira, a predoctoral fellow in kinesiology and
community health and in nutritional sciences, and the primary author and
designer of the study, published in a recent issue of the Journal of the
American Geriatrics Society. “So when you’re exercising, your
sympathetic nervous system will be on, increasing your heart rate, your
respiration, etc. Once you stop, your body always tries to get back to homeostasis.
So the parasympathetic nervous system kicks in to get everything back down to
baseline levels.”
Co-author and
kinesiology and community health professor Jeffrey A. Woods said cardiologists
are already routinely gauging CRP levels in much the same way they look at lipids
panels to assess cholesterol levels.
“Certainly,
that’s being done in the cardiovascular disease realm, but I think (it
may be effectively used as a monitor) for other diseases, such as
Alzheimer’s, diabetes and metabolic syndrome,” he said.
Woods said the main
question motivating the current research was, “What factors are related
to CRP in the elderly?”
“We’ve known
that as people age, their CRP levels go up,” Vieira said.
“That’s one of the reasons why older individuals are more prone to
develop inflammation-related diseases such as diabetes and heart disease. So we
just wanted to look at what’s predicting those levels of CRP in an
average older population that is relatively healthy.”
Perhaps the most notable
result of the study, according to the researchers, relates to heart-rate
recovery following exercise.
“The quicker the
individuals were able to get back to their resting heart rate after a strenuous
exercise test was inversely related to their CRP,” Vieira said. “In
other words, individuals who had better parasympathetic tone had lower levels
of inflammation.
“And the reason
we’re excited about this is that exercise is a great way to improve
parasympathetic tone. When you exercise – that is the
sympathetic/parasympathetic communication – your sympathetic goes up, and
when you stop exercising, your parasympathetic kicks in to bring you back to
normal. An untrained person will take a while to get their heart rate back down
to resting. A trained person’s heart rate will come back down very quickly.”
The cross-sectional
study focused on baseline test results from 132 sedentary, independently living
individuals aged 60 to 83 (47 males; 85 females) who had been recruited to
participate in the Immune Function Intervention Trial (ImFIT), a randomized longitudinal
trial designed by Woods and funded by the National Institute on Aging to
examine the relationship between exercise and immune function.
Participants included
only individuals who did not take medications that included corticosteroids,
which could interfere with immune measurements. Smokers and/or those with
severe arthritis, a history of cancer or inflammatory disease, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disorder, uncontrolled diabetes mellitus, congestive
heart failure, recent illness or vaccination, or a positive stress test were
excluded.
The physical fitness of
subjects was assessed through a battery of tests that measured such variables
as fatigue, blood pressure, oxygen intake and carbon dioxide elimination and
heart-rate recovery in conjunction with exercise on a walking treadmill. Tests
also were administered to determine the subjects’ levels of physical
activity, physical fitness, emotional stress and body composition (bone density
and body fat). Blood samples also were drawn to measure CRP levels.
“The major
criterion we were looking at was their fitness level,” Vieira said.
“A strength of our study is that we have very
good data on their fitness levels.”
And while other studies
have explored the relationship between exercise and inflammation, another
unique aspect of the U. of I. research, Vieira said, is that “no other
studies have adjusted for fitness and body fat percentages simultaneously to
really get at that question, ‘Is exercise independently reducing CRP levels,
or is it modulated through a decrease in adiposity (body fat)?’ ”
Because the study was
cross-sectional – meaning the researchers essentially took a snapshot of
the participants’ reactions and measurements at a single, fixed point
only – Vieira said it was important to note that “we can’t
say anything about cause and effect relationships.”
However, Woods said,
“it gives you some idea of what factors are related, and then you test
those in a more rigorous manner.”
Vieira said the research
“certainly suggests that fitness may be associated with a decrease in
inflammation even independent of body fat and several things, and the mechanism
may involve a parasympathetic anti-inflammatory reflex.”
“We know
inflammation is bad. We know it increases as we age, with stress and other
things,” she said. “So if we can decrease that to protect ourselves
somehow by just adopting a physically active lifestyle, that’s definitely
an advantage.”
And while the study
confirms the conclusions of previous research by others indicating that high
body fat is related to high inflammation and high fitness to low inflammation,
“the unique part of this paper is that controlling for those, we also
show that high parasympathetic tone is related to low inflammation,”
Woods said.
“And it’s
even independent of their fitness level,” Vieira interjected.
“Fitness, fatness
and parasympathetic tone appear to be important,” Woods said, summing up
the findings. “And at least according to our results, parasympathetic
tone might even be more important than those other factors.”
Co-authors with Vieira
and Woods of the study are U. of I. kinesiology and community health professors
Ellen Evans and Edward McAuley, and graduate student Rudy J. Valentine.
Note: This story has
been adapted from a news release issued by University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign.
Thank you,
Todd & Alice Smoot
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