Last reviewed: 24 March 2026
Audience: Patients, families, and non-specialist clinicians
Author: Aspergillosis.org editorial team

Many people think of inflammation as something that stays in one place: a painful joint, an inflamed lung, an irritated sinus, or a bowel flare. In reality, inflammation is often a whole-body process. Signals released at one site can travel through the blood, nervous system, and immune system, influencing other organs and changing how the body feels and functions overall.

This helps explain why a local health problem can sometimes lead to symptoms that seem much broader, such as fatigue, poor concentration, low mood, loss of appetite, aches, disturbed sleep, or worsening of other long-term conditions.

Key points

  • Inflammation is not always confined to one organ or body part.
  • Inflamed tissues release chemical messengers that can circulate throughout the body.
  • The brain, heart, kidneys, liver, gut, lungs, and immune system all communicate with one another.
  • This “cross-talk” can be helpful in short-term illness, but harmful when inflammation becomes prolonged.
  • Ongoing inflammation is linked with fatigue, brain fog, low mood, cardiovascular strain, and worsening of other chronic diseases.

Table of contents

What is inflammation?

Inflammation is part of the body’s defence system. It is one of the ways the immune system responds to infection, injury, irritation, allergens, or tissue damage. In the short term, inflammation is often helpful. It can help the body fight infection, clear damaged tissue, and begin repair.

But inflammation can also become too strong, too prolonged, or poorly controlled. When that happens, the effects may no longer stay limited to the original problem area.

Why inflammation does not always stay local

When tissue becomes inflamed, immune cells release small signalling proteins called cytokines and other inflammatory mediators. These act like chemical messages. Some stay nearby, but many enter the bloodstream and influence distant organs.

This is why inflammation in one part of the body can sometimes cause:

  • tiredness or exhaustion
  • feeling unwell or “washed out”
  • poor concentration or “brain fog”
  • worsening appetite
  • sleep disruption
  • higher strain on the heart or kidneys
  • worsening of other inflammatory conditions

Researchers increasingly describe this as systemic inflammation or organ cross-talk. In other words, organs do not operate in isolation. They are part of an interconnected network.

How the body communicates during inflammation

1. Chemical messengers in the blood

Inflamed tissues can release cytokines such as interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β), and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α). These may affect blood vessels, metabolism, the brain, the heart, and other immune cells.

These signals are useful during short-term illness, but if they remain elevated they may contribute to chronic symptoms and long-term health effects.

2. Organ-to-organ immune cross-talk

Modern immunology shows that the gut, liver, lungs, brain, heart, kidneys, and bone marrow can influence one another through immune signalling. A problem in one organ may therefore alter immune behaviour somewhere else.

This can be protective, but it can also become part of a vicious circle, especially in chronic disease.

3. Nerve signalling between the body and brain

Inflammation is not communicated only by blood. The nervous system also plays a role. Signals from inflamed tissues can travel through nerves, including the vagus nerve, to the brain. The brain then responds by adjusting immune activity and body-wide stress responses.

This helps explain why inflammation can affect fatigue, mood, motivation, sleep, and mental clarity.

4. Stress, hormones, and metabolism

Inflammation also interacts with the body’s hormonal and metabolic systems. This can influence energy use, blood sugar regulation, muscle strength, and appetite. Over time, chronic inflammation may put extra strain on the cardiovascular and kidney systems.

Common whole-body effects of inflammation

Fatigue

One of the most common effects of inflammation is fatigue. This is not simply feeling sleepy. It can be a profound lack of physical and mental energy. Many chronic inflammatory illnesses are associated with this kind of exhaustion.

Brain fog and mood changes

Inflammatory signals can affect the brain, contributing to reduced concentration, slowed thinking, low motivation, anxiety, or low mood. This does not mean symptoms are “all in the mind”. It means that immune activity can influence brain function.

Heart and blood vessel effects

Inflammation can make blood vessels less healthy over time and may contribute to a higher cardiovascular risk. This is one reason why long-standing inflammatory diseases are often linked to heart and circulatory problems.

Kidney effects

The kidneys are sensitive to inflammatory stress. In some conditions, long-term systemic inflammation can contribute to kidney damage or worsen existing kidney disease. Kidney disease itself can also increase inflammation, creating a two-way relationship.

Muscle weakness and reduced stamina

Ongoing inflammation can alter how muscles use energy and recover after activity. This may contribute to weakness, reduced exercise tolerance, and slower recovery after exertion.

Why this matters in lung disease and aspergillosis

For people with chronic lung conditions, including some forms of aspergillosis, inflammation in the airways or lungs may have effects beyond breathing alone. The lungs are not separate from the rest of the body.

Inflammation in the lungs may contribute to:

  • general fatigue
  • poor stamina
  • sleep disruption
  • brain fog
  • loss of appetite
  • worsening of other conditions

This can be especially relevant for people living with long-term inflammatory lung disease, repeated infections, allergic inflammation, or complex treatment burdens.

It is also one reason why patients sometimes feel that their symptoms are “bigger” than what would be expected from the lungs alone. Often, that experience is real and biologically plausible.

Acute inflammation versus chronic inflammation

Acute inflammation

This is the short-term response seen with infection, injury, or a sudden flare. It may cause fever, pain, swelling, and marked tiredness. Usually, it settles when the trigger is controlled.

Chronic inflammation

This is lower-grade or persistent inflammation that continues over time. It may be driven by chronic infection, immune dysregulation, ongoing tissue damage, obesity, autoimmune disease, long-term lung disease, or other medical problems. Chronic inflammation is often less dramatic but may have broader long-term effects.

What can help?

The right approach depends on the underlying cause. Broadly, management focuses on:

  • identifying and treating the cause of inflammation where possible
  • controlling infections or allergic triggers
  • optimising treatment of the underlying disease
  • supporting sleep, nutrition, and pacing of activity
  • monitoring the effects on other organs when relevant

There is rarely a single quick fix for chronic inflammation. Good management usually means looking at the whole person, not just the inflamed organ.

When to seek medical advice

Please seek medical advice if inflammation-related symptoms are worsening or if you develop:

  • new or severe breathlessness
  • chest pain
  • confusion or marked drowsiness
  • new swelling, reduced urine output, or signs of dehydration
  • persistent fevers
  • rapid decline in energy, mobility, or daily functioning

If symptoms are sudden, severe, or alarming, seek urgent medical help.

Common questions

Does inflammation always damage the whole body?

No. Short-term, controlled inflammation is a normal and useful response. Problems are more likely when inflammation is severe, repeated, or persistent.

Can one inflamed organ affect another?

Yes. There is now strong evidence that organs influence one another through immune, vascular, metabolic, and nerve-based pathways.

Can inflammation cause fatigue even if blood tests are not dramatically abnormal?

Yes. Symptoms and blood markers do not always match perfectly. Some people experience substantial fatigue and other systemic symptoms even when routine blood tests are only mildly abnormal or intermittently raised.

Is this relevant to chronic lung disease?

Yes. Lung inflammation can have effects that go beyond breathing, including fatigue, reduced stamina, and wider body effects.

References

  1. Dou J, et al. The Interplay of Cross-Organ Immune Regulation in Inflammation and Cancer. MedComm. 2025.
  2. Jin H, Li M, et al. A body–brain circuit that regulates body inflammatory responses. Nature. 2024.
  3. Katkenov N, et al. Systematic Review on the Role of IL-6 and IL-1β in Cardiovascular Diseases. Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease. 2024.
  4. Nowak KL, et al. Targeting Inflammation in CKD. Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension. 2025.
  5. Paganin W, et al. Inflammatory biomarkers in depression: a scoping review. 2024.
  6. Mehta NN, et al. IL-6 and Cardiovascular Risk: A Narrative Review. 2024.
  7. Che H, et al. Organ cross-talk: molecular mechanisms, biological functions and therapeutic opportunities. 2026.

Disclaimer: This article is for general information and education. It is not a substitute for personalised medical advice. If you are worried about worsening symptoms, new symptoms, or the effect of inflammation on your health, speak to your clinical team.

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