A Novel Outlook on the Correlation Between Acute and Chronic
Inflammatory States, a Retrospective Observational Study
Abstract
Introduction: Continuum theory states that suppression of efficient
acute inflammation is one of the mechanisms responsible for the onset of
chronic low-grade inflammation, and in the presence of chronic
inflammation, an organism is not capable of an efficient acute
inflammatory response to pathogenic stimuli. Materials and methods: We
investigated medical records from a large clinical database to assess
whether chronic and acute inflammation were mutually exclusive. To
evaluate this question, we gathered data on age, current diagnosis,
comorbidities and last high fever. Results: A total of 927 cases of
chronic inflammatory diseases were investigated. A strong association
was found between increasing age and a reduction in concurrent acute and
chronic inflammation (chi-squared statistic 51.26; p< .00001).
Twenty-one individual cases were examined for the pattern of acute and
chronic inflammatory diseases. In most cases, there was a clear increase
in acute inflammatory conditions as chronic diseases improved.
Conclusions: This retrospective study showed a strong association of
decreasing concurrent acute and chronic inflammatory states with
increasing age, and a possible mutual exclusivity of efficient acute and
chronic inflammation was indicated. Since ageing is a low-grade chronic
inflammatory process, it is possible that chronic inflammation precludes
efficient acute inflammation, which indicates that there is a need to
reconsider the manner of handling of acute inflammation in the
population.