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Sugar provides a high-energy budget for immune cells. Historically, energy was scarce, so this excess prompts the immune system to become more aggressive, defaulting to a "pro-safety" state. This can lead to unnecessary, low-grade inflammation throughout the body.
Humans evolved a robust inflammatory response to fight constant threats like infections. In today's relatively sterile world, this powerful system lacks its historical targets and can overreact to modern triggers, leading to the chronic low-level inflammation that is at the heart of many modern diseases.
The gut barrier is a single cell layer protecting your immune system. When it weakens (leaky gut), food particles and toxins cross over into the bloodstream, triggering a 24/7 immune response. This constant, low-level battle is the primary driver of chronic low-grade inflammation throughout the body.
High blood sugar has a direct mechanical effect beyond empty calories. The excess glucose acts like glue, sticking to the enzyme responsible for making nitric oxide in a process called glycation. This locks the enzyme in a fixed conformation, rendering it physically unable to function and produce the vital molecule.
Beyond visible symptoms in autoimmune disease, "hidden inflammation" is a pervasive, low-level state that can silently damage the body for years. This paradigm shift identifies it not just as a consequence of disease, but a fundamental driver of top killers like heart disease, cancer, and even aging itself.
Cytokines, the molecules of inflammation, are essentially distress signals from cells that are struggling energetically. For example, the cytokine IL-6 released after intense exercise is the muscle's way of signaling it needs energy mobilized from other parts of the body.
Our immune systems evolved to mount robust inflammatory responses against acute threats like infections and traumas. In the modern world, which lacks these constant threats, this same sensitivity causes our bodies to overreact to environmental triggers. This evolutionary mismatch creates the chronic, low-level inflammation that drives modern diseases.
Dr. Kaufman explains the harmful process of glycation with a simple analogy: think of glucose as a sticky lollipop. It attaches to vital molecules like proteins and DNA, causing them to malfunction and leading to inflammation and aging.
Dr. Will Bolsiewicz distinguishes between life-saving acute inflammation (fighting infection, healing injury) and detrimental chronic low-grade inflammation. The latter is a constant, damaging immune response likened to a “forever war” inside the body, which is at the root of many modern diseases.
A paradigm shift in medicine suggests that unseen, low-level inflammation is not merely a consequence of disease but a fundamental root cause. This "silent fire" is a common thread linking top killers like heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and even neurodegenerative disorders, preceding their development by years.
Dr. Andrew Weil argues that the underlying driver of most serious diseases that cause premature death and disability is chronic, low-level inflammation. This is primarily promoted by the mainstream diet of processed, refined foods.