Gaining a little bit of weight can trigger more and more weight gain. No, we don't mean that you let go when you put on a little bit of fat around the belly, hips and arms. Instead, research has now shown that the body can fall into a vicious cycle of weight gain-inflammation-weight gain-disease.
Here's how: a complex chain reaction in a person's own fat cells has been linked to a disruption in metabolism and weak immune response, leading to an increased risk of diseases and infections, according to a new study based on research carried out by scientists at the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.
The research, which was published in the scientific journal Nature on 2 June, as “Type I interferon sensing unlocks dormant adipocyte inflammatory potential”, argues that when obesity occurs in a human body, the person's own fat cells set off a chain reaction that worsens the body's immune response against pathogens and infections including COVID-19, leading to poor outcomes in patients.
Past studies have worryingly highlighted the rising rate of obesity around the world, with a 2014 study published in the Lancet stating that nearly 30% of the world's population was either obese or overweight (about 13% of adults are obese according to a 2016 study). These latest findings, however, can help in understanding why.