C-reactive protein (CRP) is a protein your liver releases in response to inflammation. It is one of the most widely used markers of systemic inflammation, and tracking it over time can offer a clear picture of how your lifestyle is affecting your body from the inside.
C-reactive protein is a protein produced by the liver. Under normal conditions, it circulates in the blood at very low concentrations. When the body detects tissue damage, infection, or sustained stress, immune signaling molecules called cytokines (particularly IL-6) prompt the liver to rapidly increase CRP production.
This makes CRP a reliable signal that something in the body has triggered an inflammatory response. In the short term, that response is helpful: it helps fight infections and heal injuries. The concern arises when inflammation becomes chronic, running quietly in the background for months or years without an obvious cause.
High-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) assays are capable of detecting very small changes in CRP concentration, making them useful for tracking the kind of low-grade inflammation associated with everyday lifestyle factors like diet, sleep, stress, and physical activity.
A stressor (infection, poor diet, poor sleep, chronic stress) activates immune cells.
Those cells release IL-6 and other pro-inflammatory cytokines into the bloodstream.
The liver detects these signals and ramps up CRP production within 4 to 6 hours.
CRP levels in the blood rise, providing a measurable signal of the body's inflammatory state.
High-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) is measured in milligrams per liter (mg/L). The ranges below reflect general wellness context and are based on widely referenced cardiovascular risk classifications. They are not a substitute for a healthcare provider's interpretation.
Low inflammatory activity. Associated with favorable cardiovascular and metabolic wellness in most research.
Average range for many adults. May reflect lifestyle factors like stress, diet, or inconsistent sleep.
Suggests meaningful inflammatory activity. Commonly seen with visceral fat, poor diet, sedentary behavior, or recovering from illness.
Often reflects an acute event such as active infection, injury, or significant illness. Consult a healthcare provider.
These ranges are based on high-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) reference standards from the American Heart Association and related research. Sensa is a general wellness product. These values are for educational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice.
A single CRP reading is informative. A trend over time is transformative. Regular monitoring gives you objective feedback on how your habits are affecting your body at a biological level.
Visceral fat (fat around internal organs) is one of the strongest drivers of elevated CRP. Tracking CRP alongside weight gives you a fuller picture of whether changes in body composition are actually reducing inflammation, not just moving the number on a scale.
Acute exercise transiently raises CRP, but consistent training lowers baseline inflammation over time. Monitoring CRP can help you find the balance between productive training stress and overtraining, and confirm your recovery strategies are working.
Chronic fatigue and poor sleep quality are both associated with elevated CRP. Seeing your CRP fall as you prioritize sleep hygiene provides tangible confirmation that the effort is paying off beyond just feeling rested.
Chronic low-grade inflammation is a shared feature of many common conditions, including cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, and accelerated aging. Keeping CRP in a healthy range is one measurable strategy for supporting long-term health.
Ultra-processed foods, refined carbohydrates, and excess sugar reliably raise CRP. Anti-inflammatory eating patterns consistently lower it. Your CRP can tell you whether a dietary change is working for your biology specifically, not just in population studies.
Psychological stress and social isolation both elevate inflammatory markers. Practices like consistent exercise, connection, and relaxation techniques that lower your perceived stress can also show up as measurable reductions in CRP.
Lab-based CRP testing has been the standard for decades. At-home testing changes the equation for routine wellness monitoring.
| Traditional Lab Test | At-Home Testing (Sensa) | |
|---|---|---|
| Sample Type | Blood draw (venipuncture) | Saliva, no needles |
| Where to Test | Clinic, hospital, or lab facility | Anywhere, at home |
| Appointment Required | Yes | No |
| Result Turnaround | Hours to days | Minutes |
| Cost Per Test | Can be significant without insurance | Affordable, no insurance needed |
| Frequency | Typically once per year at a checkup | Test as often as needed to track trends |
| Best For | Acute illness, clinical diagnosis | Ongoing wellness monitoring and lifestyle tracking |
Sensa is a general wellness device that detects CRP in saliva using a simple test strip, giving you a result in minutes without a clinic visit or a blood draw.
Use the collection tool included with your Sensa kit. No needles, no preparation required. The whole process takes about 30 seconds.
Place the sample on the Sensa test strip. The strip uses a lateral flow assay to detect CRP concentration in your sample.
Scan the strip with the Sensa app to get your CRP reading in minutes. The app logs your result over time so you can track trends, not just snapshots.
CRP is one of the clearest windows into your body's inflammatory state. Sensa makes it easy to check in regularly and see how your lifestyle choices are landing at the cellular level.
Buy Sensa NowNo clinic visit needed. No needles. Results in minutes.