Evidence Based This post has 44 references
0

14 Conditions Linked With High & Low CRP (incl. Cancer)

Written by Biljana Novkovic, PhD | Last updated:
Jonathan Ritter
Puya Yazdi
Medically reviewed by
Jonathan Ritter, PharmD, PhD (Pharmacology), Puya Yazdi, MD | Written by Biljana Novkovic, PhD | Last updated:

SelfHacked has the strictest sourcing guidelines in the health industry and we almost exclusively link to medically peer-reviewed studies, usually on PubMed. We believe that the most accurate information is found directly in the scientific source.

We are dedicated to providing the most scientifically valid, unbiased, and comprehensive information on any given topic.

Our team comprises of trained MDs, PhDs, pharmacists, qualified scientists, and certified health and wellness specialists.

All of our content is written by scientists and people with a strong science background.

Our science team is put through the strictest vetting process in the health industry and we often reject applicants who have written articles for many of the largest health websites that are deemed trustworthy. Our science team must pass long technical science tests, difficult logical reasoning and reading comprehension tests. They are continually monitored by our internal peer-review process and if we see anyone making material science errors, we don't let them write for us again.

Our goal is to not have a single piece of inaccurate information on this website. If you feel that any of our content is inaccurate, out-of-date, or otherwise questionable, please leave a comment or contact us at [email protected]

Note that each number in parentheses [1, 2, 3, etc.] is a clickable link to peer-reviewed scientific studies. A plus sign next to the number “[1+, 2+, etc...]” means that the information is found within the full scientific study rather than the abstract.

High CRP Levels are a marker of chronic inflammation

CRP is a protein that helps you fight infections. However, it is also a marker of low-grade inflammation and can help predict your heart disease risk. Keep reading to find out about health conditions associated with high and low CRP.

Why is High C Reactive Protein (CRP) Bad?

Signals Chronic Inflammation

Apart from acute infection or injury, CRP points to chronic or systemic inflammation. Its levels rise in response to chronic stress [1].

Many chronic conditions are marked by high CRP levels, including high blood sugar, insulin resistance, high blood pressure, obesity, diabetes, gum disease, and heart disease [1, 2, 3, 4, 5].

Increases Blood Vessel Damage

CRP is not only a marker of inflammation, but it also worsens any underlying inflammation. In the lining of blood vessels, CRP lowers nitric oxide and prostacyclin release, which worsens blood flow, while increasing the inflammatory compounds (monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), interleukin-8 (IL-8), and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1)) [2].

Researchers found that in monocyte-macrophages, CRP increases reactive oxygen species and proinflammatory cytokines, worsening oxidative stress in the body [2].

High CRP levels are a marker of chronic inflammation, found in conditions such as diabetes, obesity, and heart disease. CRP can also create inflammation on its own, damaging blood vessels and increasing oxidative stress in the body.

Conditions Linked With High C Reactive Protein (CRP)

Conditions listed below are commonly associated with high CRP. However, that doesn’t mean that if your CRP is elevated you have any of these conditions. Work with your doctor or another health care professional to get an accurate diagnosis.

1) Heart Disease

CRP increases inflammation in blood vessels and contributes to hardening of the arteries, which can eventually lead to heart disease. Plus, it can activate cells that line the interior of blood vessels causing them to malfunction [6, 7, 8].

Additionally, CRP reduces nitric oxide release from arteries and veins, depriving tissues of adequate blood flow [8]. Nitric oxide is good for the cardiovascular system because it relaxes blood vessels, increases oxygen and improves blood flow throughout the body [8].

To make matters worse, plaques in arteries can also release CRP into the bloodstream, perpetuating the cycle in people who already suffer from heart disease or who are at high risk [6].

When should you be concerned? CRP levels <1 mg/L are considered low-risk, 1 to 3 mg/L as average risk, and >3 mg/L as high risk for heart disease. Read more here [8].

High LDL and High CRP: A Deadly Combination

Increased levels of LDL cholesterol in at-risk patients cause blood vessels to make more CRP, which, in turn, helps more LDL-C enter blood vessel cells [7].

Studies have found that in healthy people, CRP can partially predict the risk of dying from a heart attack, blood vessel disease, heart failure, and arrhythmias [6, 8].

Similarly, CRP was additive to LDL cholesterol (and the Framingham 10-year risk score) in predicting future cardiovascular disease in healthy American women in the Women’s Health Study (14.7k women) [8].

The American Heart Association and Center for Disease Control and Prevention recommend using CRP as a risk marker for heart diseases in people with a Framingham risk score between 10% and 20%. This subgroup of people may benefit from high-sensitivity (hs)-CRP testing, mainly because doctors are often undecided about the treatment for a patient who is considered at intermediate risk [6].

In a controversial trial named JUPITER, healthy people with high-normal CRP levels (> 2 mg/L) given statins experienced a 44% reduction in their risk of heart attacks, stroke, hospital admissions for unstable angina, and death from heart disease [4]. This study has, however, received a lot of critiques and should be taken with a grain of salt [9].

High Blood Pressure

Research suggests that CRP may turn on a pro-inflammatory switch in blood vessels, making them narrower and stiffer – resulting in high blood pressure (hypertension) [8].

Elevated CRP preceded new-onset hypertension at an early stage in an elderly healthy population (over 300 people). Those with the highest CRP levels had a twofold greater risk of high blood pressure compared to those with the lowest CRP levels [10].

2) Metabolic Syndrome

Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of metabolic abnormalities that together increase the risk of diabetes and heart disease. These include:

  • High blood pressure
  • High blood sugar
  • Excess belly fat
  • High bad cholesterol/low good cholesterol
  • High triglycerides

A person has metabolic syndrome if they have 3 or more of the abnormalities above.

Studies have found that people with metabolic syndrome have more inflammation and higher CRP levels. The more features of metabolic syndrome a person has, the more their CRP levels increase (linearly so) [8].

High CRP is linked with lower HDL cholesterol and greater BMI, belly fat, blood pressure, triglycerides, cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, blood glucose, fasting insulin, and insulin resistance [8].

3) Obesity

Elevated CRP has been associated with obesity and abnormal fat metabolism in both adults and children. It is closely linked with high BMI and total calorie intake [11, 12].

Higher CRP correlates with lower adiponectin, a protein that enhances insulin sensitivity and prevents hardening of the arteries [11].

Studies found that schoolchildren who were overweight/obese had higher levels of CRP and IL-6, whereas children with more belly fat and total body fat only had higher levels of CRP. CRP levels could even predict BMI changes during childhood [13, 14].

4) Stroke

Several studies have found that high CRP levels were associated with a great risk of strokes, stroke complications, and death. Levels over 3 mg/ml were linked with a 40% increased risk, compared with CRP<1 mg/l over a 15-year follow-up period, especially in men who also had high blood pressure [15].

5) Obstructive Sleep Apnea

CRP is also increased in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), which is when people stop breathing during sleep. Patients with more severe sleep apnea have higher CRP levels [16, 17, 18].

Researchers have shown that sleep apnea treatment with CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) reduced the effect of the disease on CRP levels [17].

6) Rheumatoid Arthritis

CRP is found in the joint cavity fluid of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients and can bind to white blood cells and other inflammatory cells [19].

Inflammation in RA is closely related to the production of CRP and pro-inflammatory cytokines. In patients with rheumatoid arthritis, high CRP is directly linked with worse symptoms [20].

Scientists have found that levels of CRP correlate with changes in inflammation, disease activity, tissue damage, and disability. High CRP has been also linked with hardening of the arteries and osteoporosis in people with rheumatoid arthritis [20, 21].

Some studies indicate that CRP may be one of the best predictive markers of joint destruction and disease progression in early rheumatoid arthritis and a strong predictor of fractures [21].

Additionally, one study suggests that the way CRP changes within the first 2 weeks of anti-TNF therapy can help determine treatment success [22].

7) Gum Disease

Studies have found that CRP levels are higher in people with gum disease [3].

CRP tends to increase with gum destruction [3]. A study found that people with aggressive periodontitis had significantly higher CRP compared to those with localized aggressive periodontitis and healthy people [3].

The good news is that treatment of gum infections, whether by intensive mechanical therapy, drug therapy or extraction, can significantly lower CRP. In one study, 6 months of gum therapy lowered CRP levels by about 0.5 mg/l [3].

8) Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

People with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) may have high CRP, but this is not always the case. A meta-analysis suggests that CRP levels of ≤0.5 can exclude IBD in patients with IBS symptoms [23].

In one study, higher CRP before diagnosis was associated with a greater risk of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis [24].

In another study, CRP levels at diagnosis were related to disease severity in patients with ulcerative colitis but had not in patients with Crohn’s disease [25].

However, one study failed to find a link between CRP and colon inflammation [26].

9) Fatigue

Low-grade inflammation can lead to fatigue. Higher CRP was linked with fatigue – both in healthy people and in disease-free survivors of breast cancer [27, 28, 29].

10) Depression

Low-grade inflammation has been linked to depression. Several studies found a significant association between increased CRP and depressive symptoms. High levels were more frequent in people with recurrent depression, especially in those who were overweight and had low HDL cholesterol [30, 31, 32, 33].

Studies also found that CRP levels were linked with a history of suicide attempts in depressed patients. The risk of suicide attempts increased with higher levels of CRP [34, 35].

Hostility has also been associated with increased levels of CRP [36].

11) Vision Loss

Macular degeneration is a medical condition that may result in blurred vision or vision loss.

Several studies suggest there may be a close association between CRP and eye blood vessel disorders. People with higher CRP levels were more likely to get age-related macular degeneration, especially if their CRP levels are over 3 mg/L [37].

One study found that high CRP levels (> 3 mg/L) were associated with a two-fold increased risk of late-onset macular degeneration, compared to low levels (< 1 mg/L). In addition, women with levels exceeding 5 mg/L may be at a threefold increased risk [37].

12) Dementia

In 300 of the oldest of the old, high CRP levels have been associated with increased odds of all-cause dementia (memory decline), particularly in women [38].

13) Cancer

Scientists have found that cancer is more likely to develop in chronically-inflamed organs [39]. Unsurprisingly, high CRP levels have been linked with an increased risk of developing cancer [40].

Even in apparently healthy people, high levels have been linked with an increased risk of colon cancer, lung cancer, and cancer in general – excluding breast and prostate cancer [40, 41].

Higher CRP levels have also been associated with the progression of skin, ovarian, and lung cancer. For this reason, CRP may be used to detect cancer recurrence after surgery [40].

Scientists think the link between high CRP and cancer could be due to three reasons. First of all, high CRP may directly cause cancer. If so, it could be extremely useful in prevention [41]. However, there is no scientific support for this at the moment.

Secondly, it’s possible that cancer increases CRP, even in the early stages (more likely). And lastly, high CRP may point to another underlying cause of cancer, such as inflammation, high stress, and chronic disease (most likely) [41].

Conditions Linked With Low C Reactive Protein (CRP)

Low CRP is beneficial in general. The lower the levels the better.

However, scientists did find a curious link between low CRP and lupus.

14) Lupus

Low CRP levels may contribute to the development of lupus (systemic lupus erythematosus). This is because CRP may protect against autoimmunity by binding to cellular waste and autoantigens, which helps clear dying cells [42, 43, 21].

If damaged and dying cells aren’t cleared away by macrophages, their waste products build up in various tissues. Animals that can’t clear these dying cells develop autoimmunity. In fact, scientists found that CRP injections can delay the onset of lupus and the resulting kidney inflammation in mice [21].

Some scientists think that people with lupus may not produce enough CRP when the body acutely needs it, possibly due to genetic reasons. A mutation in the CRP gene that lowers CRP blood levels has been detected in people with lupus [21].

A study found that low CRP could also be caused by IgG antibodies, which are found in up to 78% of patients with lupus. IgG may bind CRP, lowering its levels in the blood [21].

The link between CRP and lupus, however, is not that straightforward because people with higher CRP had greater lupus disease activity in a number of other studies [44].

Further Reading

About the Author

Biljana Novkovic

Biljana Novkovic

PhD
Biljana received her PhD from Hokkaido University.
Before joining SelfHacked, she was a research scientist with extensive field and laboratory experience. She spent 4 years reviewing the scientific literature on supplements, lab tests and other areas of health sciences. She is passionate about releasing the most accurate science and health information available on topics, and she's meticulous when writing and reviewing articles to make sure the science is sound. She believes that SelfHacked has the best science that is also layperson-friendly on the web.

Click here to subscribe

RATE THIS ARTICLE

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
(3 votes, average: 5.00 out of 5)
Loading...

FDA Compliance

The information on this website has not been evaluated by the Food & Drug Administration or any other medical body. We do not aim to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any illness or disease. Information is shared for educational purposes only. You must consult your doctor before acting on any content on this website, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, taking medication, or have a medical condition.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.