Anti-Inflammatory Foods May Lower Frailty Risk as You Age
Certain blood metabolites tied to fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes were linked to lower frailty risk in nearly 10,000 Canadian adults aged 45-85. The protective effect worked partly by reducing inflammation markers. On the flip side, a high omega-6 to omega-3 ratio and processed meat metabolites were tied to higher frailty risk through increased inflammation. The study tracked participants over three years, connecting dietary patterns to measurable metabolic changes.
Key Insight
This study suggests plant-rich diets may help lower inflammation linked to frailty risk.
Related Studies
Better Diet Linked to Slower Epigenetic Aging, But Exercise Steals the Show
In two large U.S. studies of older adults, eating a higher-quality diet was tied to slower epigenetic aging and lower death risk. About 44% of the diet-mortality link was explained by GrimAge, a biological aging clock. But when researchers accounted for physical activity, the diet effect mostly disappeared. Movement may matter as much as the menu.
Cardio vs. Weights for Type 2 Diabetes: Different Wins for Each
In adults with Type 2 diabetes, cardio and resistance training help in different ways. Aerobic exercise was best for boosting adiponectin and lowering leptin, two hormones tied to fat regulation. Resistance training showed bigger drops in inflammatory markers like TNF-alpha and IL-6, especially in younger or overweight people. The authors caution these results are hypothesis-generating, not firm exercise prescriptions.
What Centenarians' Immune Systems Reveal About Escaping Age-Related Disease
People who live past 100 tend to have immune systems that look surprisingly young. This review found they have less chronic inflammation, better cellular cleanup (autophagy), and gut bacteria patterns linked to healthy aging. Those living past 110 often have immune profiles resembling much younger adults.
Disclaimer: Research summaries are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health routine.
