Control of chronic inflammation may turn out to be one of the more important themes in the treatment of aging as a medical condition. Senescent cells generate inflammatory signaling, but removing that contribution is likely the easiest aspect of the problem. Many forms of age-related cellular damage and dysfunction generate constant, unwanted, excess inflammation through interactions and signals that are used during a normal, desirable inflammatory reaction, such as to injury or infection. Thus interfering in these mechanisms must be very selective; simply blockading a given signal has undesirable side-effects, such as a weakening of the immune response. A fair amount of the research aimed at producing more selective anti-inflammatory treatments is focused on <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stimulato…
Towards More Selective Ways to Block Unwanted Inflammation
Control of chronic inflammation may turn out to be one of the more important themes in the treatment of aging as a medical condition. Senescent cells generate inflammatory signaling, but removing that contribution is likely the easiest aspect of the problem. Many forms of age-related cellular damage and dysfunction generate constant, unwanted, excess inflammation through interactions and signals that are used during a normal, desirable inflammatory reaction, such as to injury or infection. Thus interfering in these mechanisms must be very selective; simply blockading a given signal has undesirable side-effects, such as a weakening of the immune response. A fair amount of the research aimed at producing more selective anti-inflammatory treatments is focused on <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stimulato…