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Physical activity, exercise and low-grade systemic inflammation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2010

Julia Wärnberg*
Affiliation:
Immunonutrition Research Group, Department of Metabolism and Nutrition, Instituto del Frío-ICTAN, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, Spain Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, School of Medicine, University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain Unit for Preventive Nutrition, Department of Biosciences and Nutrition at Novum, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
Karen Cunningham
Affiliation:
The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, GA, USA
Javier Romeo
Affiliation:
Immunonutrition Research Group, Department of Metabolism and Nutrition, Instituto del Frío-ICTAN, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, Spain
Ascension Marcos
Affiliation:
Immunonutrition Research Group, Department of Metabolism and Nutrition, Instituto del Frío-ICTAN, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, Spain
*
*Corresponding author: Dr Julia Warnberg, fax +34 91 549 36 27, email [email protected]
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Abstract

Prospective studies have shown that chronic low-grade inflammation may contribute to the pathogenesis of the most common chronic diseases and in particular CVD. Obesity has repeatedly been associated with moderately raised levels of inflammation, and this observation has led to the view that obesity is characterised by a state of chronic low-grade inflammation. There is now great interest in elucidating how physical activity and exercise modulate inflammation. This review summarises the current research addressing the influence of physical activity and exercise in mitigating the risks of obesity and diseases such as type-II diabetes and CVD, through its action on the low-grade inflammatory state. Most research on this topic hypothesised that the association between physical activity and inflammatory markers is independent of fatness, but very few studies have proven this. Given that physical activity and obesity are often inversely related, it is not clear as to whether the anti-inflammatory health benefits of a physically active lifestyle are due to exercise per se or result from favourable changes in the body composition.

Type
3rd International Immunonutrition Workshop
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2010

Abbreviation:
CRP

C-reactive protein

Low-grade inflammation

Inflammation is a key function in the process by which the body responds to an injury or an infection, and the acute phase of inflammation normally leads to recovery from infection to healing, and a return to normal values within a few days. However, if the response is not properly phased, the process can develop into a chronic low-grade inflammatory state which may trigger different diseases under pathological conditions(Reference Hotamisligil1, Reference Kahn, Hull and Utzschneider2). Prospective studies in adults have shown that chronic low-grade inflammation may contribute to the pathogenesis of diseases such as atherosclerosis(Reference Libby3, Reference Hansson4), type I- and type-II diabetes(Reference Hotamisligil1, Reference Kahn, Hull and Utzschneider2), cancer(Reference de Visser, Eichten and Coussens5), several types of neurodegenerative disorders(Reference Britschgi and Wyss-Coray6) and autoimmune diseases(Reference Vogt, Fuhrnrohr and Muller7).

Several parameters of the inflammatory reaction can be measured in plasma. The inflammatory markers that have been shown to be associated with obesity or the metabolic syndrome include acute phase proteins, pro-inflammatory cytokines, adhesion molecules and adipokines (proteins secreted by adipose tissue). C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations are easily, accurately and fairly inexpensively measured in blood. It is an acute phase reactant and a very sensitive marker of inflammation. High-CRP levels have no specificity in differentiating disease entities from one another, but despite its lack of specificity, CRP has now emerged as one of the most powerful predictors of cardiovascular risk(Reference Hansson4, Reference Pearson, Mensah and Alexander8, Reference Hansson9). In a direct comparison of a panel of inflammatory and lipid markers in their ability to predict cardiovascular events in adults, CRP surpassed other classical risk markers, including LDL-cholesterol(Reference Ridker, Buring and Cook10, Reference Ridker, Stampfer and Rifai11). The American Heart Association and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in the USA issued a joint statement confirming that CRP is the best and most clinically useful of the markers of inflammation currently available, with the following cut-off points for assessing CVD risk: low risk (CRP<1·0 mg/l), average risk (1·0–3·0 mg/l) and high risk (>3·0 mg/l)(Reference Pearson, Mensah and Alexander8). Most studies use CRP as the only marker of inflammation, however, choosing a wider spectrum of inflammatory markers can give us a better picture of the specific mechanisms involved. Other commonly used acute-phase reactants include complement factors C3 and C4, serum amyloid A and ceruloplasmin. Pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6, IL-1β and TNFα, are often included in the panel of inflammatory markers and have been associated with obesity and components of the metabolic syndrome. The endothelial expression of vascular adhesion molecules VCAM-1 and intracellular adhesion molecule ICAM-1 and E-selectin are used as markers of the filtration of inflammatory cells in the arterial wall. Of the adipokines, the most studied is adiponectin(Reference Hotamisligil1, Reference Gustafson, Hammarstedt and Andersson12).

Obesity-induced chronic low-grade inflammation

Obesity has repeatedly been associated with moderately raised levels of inflammation, and this observation has led to the view that obesity is characterised by a state of chronic low-grade inflammation(Reference Trayhurn and Wood13). Adipose tissue is now widely recognised as having endocrine functions(Reference Trayhurn and Wood13). Adipokines are locally produced in the adipose tissue seem to increase the hepatic synthesis of acute phase inflammatory proteins (e.g. CRP, complement factors and serum amyloid A). The continued identification of bioactive proteins secreted by adipokines supports the theory that an excess of adipocity plays a central role in the metabolic syndrome and in insulin resistance(Reference Hotamisligil1, Reference Kahn, Hull and Utzschneider2, Reference Gustafson, Hammarstedt and Andersson12).

In the metabolic syndrome, obesity is the main determinant of inflammation, and the relative implication of each component may be difficult to disaggregate when they cluster together in a metabolic disorder.

Insulin: an anti-inflammatory hormone?

Recent observations in in vitro studies have proposed a pro-inflammatory effect of glucose and an anti-inflammatory action of insulin(Reference Hotamisligil1, Reference Kahn, Hull and Utzschneider2, Reference Gustafson, Hammarstedt and Andersson12). These observations have led to a working hypothesis explaining how the pro-inflammatory state that accompanies the metabolic syndrome associates with both insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction, via the connection between inflammation and metabolic processes. This hypothesis would also explain why insulin-resistant states (like obesity and type-II diabetes) are associated with oxidative stress, inflammation and atherosclerosis.

Physical activity counteracting obesity-induced low-grade inflammation

Body fat seems to be the main determinant of inflammation. However, physical activity is a major modifiable risk factor of obesity and therefore offers a potential therapeutic approach to modulate low-grade inflammation.

The health benefits of a physically active lifestyle are well recognised. Physical inactivity and obesity are also increasingly recognised as modifiable behavioural risk factors for a wide range of chronic diseases, and in particular for CVD(Reference Pate, Pratt and Blair14). It could therefore be reasonable to hypothesise that health benefits attributed to physical activity may be mediated by reducing or preventing inflammation.

Physical fitness, physical exercise and physical activity are used as interchangeable concepts in most reviews on this topic, but it is important to point out the differences to highlight the potential differences in outcomes. Physical activity is any body movement that increases energy expenditure(Reference Caspersen, Powell and Christenson15). Self-reported data of physical activity is easy and feasible to ask in a questionnaire or interview in large populations, but is a measurement subject to recall and reporting biases. Exercise is planned, structured and repetitive physical activity, while physical fitness is the capacity to perform physical activity, and makes reference to a full range of physiological and psychological qualities. Physical fitness has been also defined as ‘a set of attributes that people have or achieve that relates to the ability to perform physical activity’(Reference Caspersen, Powell and Christenson15). To eliminate reporting bias that could be present in self-reported physical activity measurement, several studies have examined the relationship between cardiorespiratory fitness and inflammatory markers.

VO2max attained during a graded maximal exercise to voluntary exhaustion has long been considered by WHO as the single best indicator of cardiorespiratory fitness(Reference Shephard, Allen and Benade16). Nevertheless, one should bear in mind that the measurements are different and that different metabolic pathways for any possible anti-inflammatory effect could be present, and therefore clearly differentiate the methodologies used.

Excellent reviews of the evidence addressing the influence of physical activity and fitness on low-grade inflammation from epidemiological studies as well as clinical trials on the general adult population have been published(Reference Hamer17, Reference Panagiotakos, Kokkinos and Manios18), also in athletes(Reference Tomaszewski, Charchar and Przybycin19, Reference Northoff, Weinstock and Berg20), and to a lesser extent in children and adolescents(Reference Wärnberg, Nova and Romeo21). A wide range of inflammatory markers have been measured and assessed against physical activity; these include fibrinogen, cytokines, leucocytes, although CRP is by far the most commonly used.

Acute v. regular exercise

IL-6 and other cytokines which are produced and released by skeletal muscles have been suggested to be involved in mediating the health-beneficial effects of exercise and play important roles in the protection against diseases associated with low-grade inflammation. The following hypothesis is based on years of observation by Pedersen and co-workers(Reference Pedersen, Steensberg and Fischer22Reference Fischer, Berntsen and Perstrup24): plasma IL-6 increases in an exponential fashion with exercise and is related to exercise intensity, duration, the mass of muscle recruited and one's endurance capacity. Consequently, the contracting skeletal muscle is a major source of circulating IL-6 in response to acute exercise. During heavy exercise, such as a marathon, there is up to a 60-fold increase in the IL-6 plasma levels(Reference Ostrowski, Rohde and Zacho25) with the duration of the event explaining more than 50% of the variation(Reference Fischer26). The mentioned plasma IL-6 increase supports the hypothesis that the post-exercise cytokine production is related to skeletal muscle damage with an acute inflammatory response(Reference Philippou, Bogdanis and Maridaki27).

Interestingly, IL-6 shows a markedly lower response to acute exercise in trained subjects. The health benefits of long-term regular exercise are ascribed to the anti-inflammatory response elicited by an acute bout of exercise, which is partly mediated by muscle-derived IL-6. Physiological concentrations of IL-6 stimulate the appearance in the circulation of the anti-inflammatory cytokines IL-1ra and IL-10, and inhibit the production of the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNFα. The anti-inflammatory effects of exercise may therefore offer protection against TNF-induced insulin resistance. Moreover, IL-6 stimulates lipolysis as well as fat oxidation. The increase of IL-6 at the end of acute exercise is responsible for the increased CRP levels during late recovery. In response to regular physical activity, basal as well as post-exercise plasma levels of IL-6 decreases by mechanisms that might include increased glycogen content, improved anti-oxidative capacity and improved insulin sensitivity. The lower levels of IL-6 in circulation will subsequently result in lower CRP levels. When untrained, basal plasma IL-6 and CRP levels are elevated via mechanisms that may involve impaired insulin sensitivity and/or increased oxidative stress(Reference Pedersen, Steensberg and Fischer22, Reference Pedersen23).

Few studies have prospectively examined the effect of exercise training on low-grade inflammatory status, and the data obtained from intervention studies are less consistent when compared with cross-sectional population studies or with clinical experiments. A lower number of subjects or a good physical condition at the start of some intervention studies may explain a part of this inconsistency. Nevertheless, two longitudinal studies in athletes show that regular training induces a reduction in the CRP level(Reference Fallon, Fallon and Boston28, Reference Mattusch, Dufaux and Heine29).

Physical activity-based lifestyle change appears to be the most variable component of energy expenditure and therefore has been the target of behavioural interventions to modify body weight. However, combined dietary and exercise interventions do not provide consistent evidence that exercise per se and not weight loss is more important for reducing inflammatory factors, and it is beyond this summary and can be reviewed elsewhere(Reference Nicklas, You and Pahor30).

Conflicting findings exist in clinical trials that have involved exercise only. Several training interventions have not produced changes in the basal IL-6 or CRP(Reference Hammett, Prapavessis and Baldi31Reference Marcell, McAuley and Traustadottir34), while significant reductions in inflammatory markers have been observed following training without changes in BMI or body fat in elderly participants(Reference Kohut, McCann and Russell35, Reference Stewart, Flynn and Campbell36). The biggest trial with exercise training on inflammation was performed in 652 sedentary healthy, young and middle-aged, white and black women and men in the HERITAGE Family Study after a 20-week training intervention(Reference Lakka, Lakka and Rankinen37). There was no control group to compare with, and every subject served as his/her own control. A non-significant reduction was consistent across all population groups and varied between 1·2 and 2·2 mg/l. Considering that the variation over time in CRP in healthy individuals with stable lifestyles is small(Reference Pearson, Mensah and Alexander8), the reduction, although non-significant, could nevertheless reflect the true effect of exercise training. Further stratification according to basal CRP levels showed a reduction by about 1·3 mg/l in subjects with initial CRP levels above 3·0 mg/l. This observation is potentially important from a public health and clinical point of view by decreasing the risk of CVD in individuals with high CRP. Thus, baseline levels may be an important factor.

Elderly people and disease states

Elderly people have higher basal levels of inflammation independent of disease status, and a considerable number of studies have been carried out in this population to assess the associations between physical activity and inflammatory markers(Reference Elosua, Bartali and Ordovas38Reference Jankord and Jemiolo43). Rather consistent inverse BMI independent associations are found and the associations are suggested to be dose-dependent; the more physically active the person, the lower the inflammatory markers(Reference Fischer, Berntsen and Perstrup24, Reference Colbert, Visser and Simonsick44). Also, subjects over 80 years show consistent inverse associations between inflammation and physical activity(Reference Bruunsgaard, Ladelund and Pedersen45). A mean score of functional fitness was associated with IL-6, and IL-1RA (but not CRP, TNFα, IL-10 or IL-1β) in a prospective population-based study of 1020 participants aged 65 years and above(Reference Elosua, Bartali and Ordovas38, Reference Cesari, Penninx and Pahor46). Muscle strength was also evaluated in this study and low hand-grip strength was associated with high levels of CRP (P<0·001) and IL-6 (P<0·001)(Reference Cesari, Penninx and Pahor46). A few more studies have shown a negative association of CRP, IL-6 and TNFα with muscle strength(Reference Taaffe, Harris and Ferrucci41, Reference Visser, Pahor and Taaffe47).

Exercise intervention in elderly people or patients with CVD shows more consistent results of an anti-inflammatory effect. After a 6-month individualised, supervised exercise programme for 43 subjects at a high risk of IHD, a trend towards reduced CRP levels (35%) was observed. The subjects exercised for a mean of 2·5 (range, 0·3–7·4) h per week(Reference Smith, Dykes and Douglas48). Another study has reported a decrease of basal plasma IL-6 after aerobic training in patients with coronary artery disease(Reference Goldhammer, Tanchilevitch and Maor49). A randomised trial of 39 patients with intermittent claudication demonstrated that both serum CRP and amyloid-A levels were significantly reduced after 3 and 6 months of supervised exercise compared with controls(Reference Tisi, Hulse and Chulakadabba50). In a relatively large intervention study of exercise training on cardiac rehabilitation patients, the median CRP concentrations were significantly reduced by 41% (mean change from 5·9 (sd 7·7) mg/l to 3·8 (sd 5·8) mg/l; median change from 3·4 to 2·0 mg/l) in 235 patients with coronary artery disease, while CRP concentration did not change in 42 subjects who did not exercise(Reference Milani, Lavie and Mehra51). Again, the exercise training seemed to be more effective in those with the highest CRP concentration, independent of changes in body weight or percentage of body fat(Reference Milani, Lavie and Mehra51) indicating that baseline levels of low-grade inflammation may be an important factor.

In disease states such as symptomatic CVD or in patients with the metabolic syndrome, as well as in elderly people, levels of inflammatory markers are generally higher than in healthy young adults. Evidence points out that higher basal low-grade inflammation may be a factor in determining the relative contribution of fitness. Studies in patients with diabetes(Reference McGavock, Mandic and Vonder Muhll52) and metabolic syndrome(Reference Aronson, Sheikh-Ahmad and Avizohar53, Reference Aronson, Sella and Sheikh-Ahmad54) have consistently demonstrated inverse associations between fitness and inflammation independent of fatness. In one study, the independent associations of fitness were in fact more prominent among metabolic syndrome patients compared with healthy participants(Reference Aronson, Sheikh-Ahmad and Avizohar53, Reference Aronson, Sella and Sheikh-Ahmad54).

Middle-aged, younger adults and children

Several studies of large population cohorts, such as the British Regional Heart Study(Reference Wannamethee, Lowe and Whincup40), the ATTICA study(Reference Panagiotakos, Pitsavos and Chrysohoou55), the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey(Reference Abramson and Vaccarino56, Reference King, Carek and Mainous57), the men's Health Professionals Follow-up Study(Reference Pischon, Hankinson and Hotamisligil58), the Nurses' Health Study II(Reference Pischon, Hankinson and Hotamisligil58) and the Women's Health Study(Reference Mora, Lee and Buring59), provide evidence for an inverse, independent dose–response relationship between plasma CRP concentration and level of physical activity in both men and women, but the consistency is less than in elderly subjects, or in disease states.

On the contrary, the associations found between self-reported physical activity, and soluble receptor of TNF-R1 and TNF-R2, serum IL-6 and CRP in a study including healthy men from The Men's Health Professionals Follow-up Study and healthy women from the Nurses' Health Study II(Reference Pischon, Hankinson and Hotamisligil58) were no longer significant when adjusting for BMI and leptin, suggesting that inflammation does not directly account for the beneficial effects of physical activity. The effects in healthy men and women of BMI, CRP and physical activity were measured longitudinally over 1 year and retrospectively for physical activity the previous year, concluding that BMI, but not previous year or current physical activity, predicts CRP(Reference Rawson, Freedson and Osganian60). A univariate analysis of CRP levels in 2120 Finns showed that CRP was associated with obesity indices and physical activity among both sexes(Reference Raitakari, Mansikkaniemi and Marniemi61). In multivariate correlates, however, the determinants of CRP levels include obesity and smoking in men and obesity, oral contraceptives use and physical activity in women. The study showed that about one in three healthy women who used oral contraceptives had CRP concentration exceeding 3 mg/l, which should be taken into account when studying younger females. In a longitudinal study(Reference Rawson, Freedson and Osganian60) of healthy men and women, BMI, but not current- or previous-year physical activity, was significantly related to CRP. Similarly, a cross-sectional study(Reference Verdaet, Dendale and De Bacquer62) in men found no relationship between leisure time, physical activity and CRP, fibrinogen and serum amyloid A, after correction for BMI and current smoking status.

Cross-sectional studies in men from the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study have demonstrated that cardiorespiratory fitness levels are inversely associated with CRP values and also the prevalence of elevated CRP values(Reference Church, Barlow and Earnest63). Analyses with fibrinogen and leucocyte count showed similar results(Reference Church, Finley and Earnest64). The competing effect of weight and fitness (assessed by submaximal graded exercise treadmill testing) on cardiorespiratory fitness levels was studied in the NHANES (1999–2002) which included 2112 US adults without previously diagnosed CVD(Reference Diaz, Player and Mainous65). Both fitness and BMI were independently associated with increased fasting insulin and CRP. However, when patients with low, moderate and high fitness were further stratified as normal, overweight, or obese, weight remained significantly associated with CRP, but fitness did not.

Disease-free young population studies have assessed the interaction between inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6 and TNFα), physical activity or cardiorespiratory fitness and fatness(Reference Cook, Mendall and Whincup66Reference Ruiz, Ortega and Warnberg74). Organised leisure time exercise (assessed by questionnaire) in children has shown negative correlations with serum IL-6 concentrations, independent of adiposity and fat localisation(Reference Platat, Wagner and Klumpp68), and in 10-year-old children, a borderline significant negative association was observed between CRP and self-reported physical activity, independent of ponderal index(Reference Cook, Mendall and Whincup66). US children and young adults (aged 6 to 24 years) from the Columbia University BioMarkers Study showed an inverse correlation between cardiovascular fitness level and CRP, but only in boys, which remained after adjustment of confounders including BMI(Reference Isasi, Deckelbaum and Tracy69). Only one study has used accelerometry (an objective measure of total physical activity compared with leisure time physical activity or exercise) instead of questionnaires as well as cardiovascular fitness(Reference Ruiz, Ortega and Warnberg74). In this study of 9-year-old Swedish children, total physical activity was unrelated to CRP, fibrinogen, C3 or C4, but exercise was. Nevertheless, once body fat was entered in the regression models, no associations with cardiovascular fitness or physical activity and either of the inflammatory markers measured were observed(Reference Ruiz, Ortega and Warnberg74). Similarly, no associations were found between cardiorespiratory fitness or self-reported physical activity and CRP in 12-year-old healthy Welsh children(Reference Thomas, Baker and Graham75).

CRP, C3 and ceruloplasmin (but not C4) were negatively associated with muscle strength after controlling for sex, age, pubertal status, weight, height, socioeconomic status and cardiorespiratory fitness, but did not remain when adjusting body fat. Nevertheless, when stratifying according to overweight status, CRP (but not C3, C4 or ceruloplasmin) was associated with muscle strength in overweight adolescents (but not normal weights) after controlling for potential confounders, including body fat and fat-free mass(Reference Ruiz, Ortega and Warnberg76).

Gender effects

It has been suggested that the role of fatness in relation to fitness and inflammatory pathways may be especially prominent in women(Reference Hamer17). In three studies(Reference Elosua, Bartali and Ordovas38, Reference Albert, Glynn and Ridker42, Reference Isasi, Deckelbaum and Tracy69) an inverse relationship between fitness and CRP was demonstrated for males, but not females after adjusting for fatness. The reason for this gender-related discrepancy is unclear, but may be related to less physical activity in women. Nevertheless, there is a close link between sex steroids, subclinical inflammation, insulin resistance and body fat distribution in regularly menstruating women, and serum concentrations of CRP significantly change during the menstrual cycle(Reference Blum, Muller and Huber77). Furthermore, CRP levels are more strongly related to insulin resistance and the individual components of the metabolic syndrome in women than in men(Reference Rutter, Meigs and Sullivan78).

Summary

Most research on this topic hypothesised that the association between fitness and inflammatory factors is independent of fatness. Given that physical activity and obesity are often inversely related, it is not clear as to whether the anti-inflammatory health benefits of a physically active lifestyle are due to exercise per se or result from favourable changes in body composition. Related anti-inflammatory effects could be mediated by increased insulin sensitivity and/or improved concentrations of HDL-cholesterol, reactive oxygen species or endothelial function, which all demonstrate anti-inflammatory actions(Reference Dandona, Aljada and Chaudhuri79), and are related to both body fat and exercise. A systematic review by Hamer addresses whether fitness or fatness has the greatest impact on inflammatory factors(Reference Hamer17). The review concluded that both fitness and fatness are associated with systemic inflammatory status, although the relative contributions of both may be dependent on age, disease status and gender. For example, the association between adiposity and low-grade systemic inflammation has been shown to be considerably stronger in women than in men(Reference Thorand, Baumert and Döring80).

Most apparent is the comparison between consistency in studies between elderly population and children or adolescents, or obese v. lean subjects.

Although increasing physical activity may be an effective therapy for weight loss and may also emerge as a promising treatment for reducing overall inflammation, the magnitude of the effect to produce clinically meaningful results in the general population requires further research. Nevertheless, exercise is uniquely positioned to reduce inflammation and even small non significant reductions in CRP levels may contribute to clinical benefits by reducing cardiovascular and metabolic risk.

Conclusions

Few studies have proven that the association between physical activity and inflammatory markers is independent of fatness. Given that physical activity and obesity are often inversely related, it is not clear as to whether the anti-inflammatory health benefits of a physically active lifestyle are due to exercise per se or result from favourable changes in body composition. Nevertheless, we consider that there is enough evidence to suggest that regular physical activity induces favourable changes on the metabolic profile including the inflammatory status, contributing as such to clinical benefits by reducing cardiovascular and metabolic risk.

Acknowledgements

K. C. is employed by The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, GA, USA. A. M., J. W. and J. R. declare no conflicts of interest. All authors participated in the writing of the paper and provided comments on the drafts and approved the final version.

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