Background: Inflammatory disorders represent a major burden in general practice, spanning autoimmune diseases, metabolic-inflammatory conditions, and post-infectious syndromes. Their protean manifestations often lead to delayed diagnosis, fragmented care, and suboptimal outcomes. In the UK, these conditions account for a significant proportion of primary care consultations, with chronic low-grade inflammation implicated in up to 50% of multimorbidity cases.Aim: To explore the evolving understanding of inflammatory processes and their implications for diagnosis, management, and prevention in general practice.Design & Setting: Narrative review with a translational perspective, informed by clinical experience and current evidence from UK primary care settings. Method: Literature was synthesised from primary care, immunology, and neurophysiology domains, with emphasis on conditions presenting commonly in UK general practice. A targeted search of PubMed and Cochrane databases (2015–2025) was conducted using terms such as “inflammation”, “primary care”, “chronic disease”, and “general practice”. Additional insights were drawn from clinical observations in multimorbid patients and mechanistic studies in neurophysiology.Results: Advances in immunology and systems biology are reshaping the conceptualisation of inflammation, shifting from organ-specific syndromes to systemic dysregulation. This has direct implications for early detection (e.g., subtle inflammatory markers like high-sensitivity C-reactive protein [hsCRP] and cytokine profiles), multimorbidity management (e.g., cardiovascular and metabolic consequences of chronic inflammation), and therapeutic strategies (e.g., lifestyle interventions, biologics, integrated care models). Chronic inflammation serves as a unifying pathway across diseases, driven by lifestyle and environmental factors, with neuro-immune interactions offering novel therapeutic targets.Conclusion: General practice is uniquely positioned to recognise inflammatory patterns across the lifespan, integrate mechanistic insights into holistic care, and drive research that bridges the molecular and the everyday clinical. A renewed focus on inflammation in primary care could enhance both precision and person-centred medicine.Keywords: Inflammation, primary care, general practice, neuro-immune interactions, lifestyle interventions, multimorbidity