Walking into daily life stress, processed foods, and pollution can feel like living inside a slow-motion rusting machine. This “rust” isn’t visible on your skin at first but inside your cells it shows up as oxidative stress in the body. According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), oxidative stress happens when free radicals outnumber antioxidants, damaging cells, proteins, and even DNA. Over time it’s linked to early aging, chronic fatigue, and metabolic diseases.

What Is Oxidative Stress and Why It Matters

At its core, oxidative stress is an imbalance between harmful free radicals and your body’s defense system antioxidants. Think of free radicals as tiny sparks. In a healthy state your antioxidant system (vitamins C, E, glutathione) puts out those sparks. But poor diet, lack of sleep, toxins, and ongoing stress let the sparks build into flames. This is the cause of oxidative stress that accelerates damage and raises risk for diabetes, heart disease, and even cancer (Harvard Health).

Signs of Oxidative Stress You Shouldn’t Ignore

Early signs of oxidative stress can be subtle: low energy, frequent infections, poor wound healing, or brain fog. Skin may lose elasticity sooner, a visible clue of glycation and oxidative stress and aging working together. Dr. Pramod Tripathi highlights that people with metabolic issues often show higher markers of oxidative damage long before symptoms appear.

From Inflammation to Obesity: The Hidden Link

Research in PubMed shows a close link between oxidative stress and inflammation. When cells are inflamed, they produce even more free radicals, creating a vicious cycle. This cycle fuels insulin resistance and weight gain, a phenomenon described as inflammation, oxidative stress and obesity. That’s why lifestyle changes addressing both inflammation and oxidative stress are key to preventing metabolic disease.

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Last Update: October 1, 2025