The danger of overeating: Too many calories cause fat cells to become ‘infected’

overeating-van-make-you-severely-ill(NaturalHealth365)  Do you have unwanted fat on your body?  Unfortunately, it turns out that excess body fat doesn’t just sit there on your body.  Research shows that fat cells can trigger an unhealthy inflammation response – especially in people prone to overeating.

Incidentally, you may already have heard that an excess of fat cells promotes cancer cell growth in people with obesity.  It’s mainly due to the stress on the hormonal system.  But here’s what the new research is telling us.

Another reason why fat cells have such a negative effect on our health is what’s called the “immune-mediated inflammatory response.”

Overeating throws the entire immune system into chaos

A recent review published in the journal Ageing Research Review found that obesity-induced chronic low-grade inflammation in adipose tissue contributes to a host of problems, including the onset and progression of Alzheimer’s disease.

In a March 2013 issue of the peer-reviewed journal Cell Metabolism, researchers from The Methodist Hospital found that high-calorie diets did far more than “just” cause an over-accumulation of fat cells (as if that isn’t problematic enough).

It turns out that these excess and “overfed” fat cells actually stimulate an increase in the production of a group of proteins called major histocompatibility complex II (MHCII).

This is bad news, and we’ll discuss why in a second.  First, let’s talk about how this happens:

The standard American diet and lifestyle are high in sugar, high (toxic) fat, and loaded with ’empty’ (worthless) calories – combined with an overall lack of physical activity.  These excess nutrients are stored as body fat.

Eventually, extra fat cells help to produce leptin – a hormone whose main role is to inhibit hunger, signaling you to stop eating in an ‘ideal’ world.

Unfortunately, excessive amounts of leptin caused by overeating trigger specific immune cells to produce a molecule called interferon gamma.  Then, this molecule triggers fat cells to produce MHCII.

Why is inappropriate MHCII protein production a problem?  (Let’s talk about that now.)

A WARNING about widespread inflammation and disease risk

MHCII proteins are normally involved in immune responses against viruses, bacteria, and other pathogens.  In other words, they help launch a necessary inflammatory response that is required to help the body fight off infection.

The problem is that the mice and humans involved in the study mentioned were not under attack by any pathogens.  However, because these proteins were being produced by the excess fat cells, the immune system acted as if there was a pathogenic threat, thus triggering an inflammatory response.

What’s the takeaway?  Fat cells – especially those caused by overeating – issue false alarm (stress) signals to the body by producing immune-mediated proteins.  This effectively launches a widespread systemic inflammation – a type of inflammation that has been linked to major diseases, including cancer, diabetes, dementia, and depression.

In other words, the global public health crisis of obesity isn’t just about being fat and sick – but, rather, it’s about the fact that being fat can literally make you sick.

Your goal?  Shed the excess pounds, keep those pounds off, and adopt a lifestyle that reduces inflammation.

This way, you’ll be far more likely to avoid serious chronic health problems and more likely to enjoy a lean (healthy) body weight.

Sources for this article include:

NIH.gov
ScienceDaily.com
Cell.com
Health.ClevelandClinic.org
The-rheumatologist.org
NIH.gov
Eurekalert.org

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