Being fat makes all these diseases strike earlier, and that seems to be at least in part because fat cells
spur more inflammation.
Not exact matches
Stiff joints are one thing, but they can lead to joint
inflammation, bone
spurs, loss of flexibility, and
more issues.
Ridker and Libby speculated that for an anti-inflammatory to work, it needed to be much
more specific; NSAIDs and steroids have broad effects all over the body, and NSAIDs can
spur inflammation along with blunting it.
As I increased my exercise intensity about 1 month before these tests (jump rope 1,000 times 2 - 3 times a week and
more running on hard pavement), my thinking is that the bone
spurs that exist where my ankles meet my feet (still there from when the RA was active), are causing this slight
inflammation / antibody increase.
This is
more often seen in older rabbits, as these have had time to develop molar
spurs, or molar root problems that can cause
inflammation or even develop into infections that spread to the sinuses.