Chronic Inflammation

Definition

Inflammation that persists over weeks, months, or years rather than resolving after an acute trigger. Sometimes low-grade and symptom-poor, it is associated with cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, autoimmune disorders, and neurological conditions.

When the immune system fails to switch off

Unlike acute inflammation — the body's normal, time-limited response to infection or injury — chronic inflammation represents a dysregulation of this process: the immune system remains in persistent, low-level activation even when no acute threat is present. Elevated levels of inflammatory biomarkers such as CRP, IL-6, and TNF-α can be measured in blood in many of these conditions.

A key insight from modern research is that chronic inflammation is not only an immune system failure — it is also a failure of nervous system regulation. When the inflammatory reflex is impaired, the brain's ability to actively suppress excessive immune activity is reduced, allowing inflammation to persist unchecked. This is part of the biological rationale for vagus nerve stimulation research.

What Is Inflammation — and When Does It Become a Problem?

Reviewed by

Ulf Andersson

Professor of Pediatric Rheumatology, Karolinska Institutet

Worked at Karolinska for five decades as a clinician and a basic scientist focusing on inflammation. Co-discoverer of HMGB1 as the prototype alarmin molecule. Honorary doctor at Hofstra University in New York. Highly Cited Clarivate Researcher Web of Science awards.

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