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  • The Truth on Abdominal Fat

    http://www.newstarget.com/z006981.html


    The truth on losing abdominal body fat - forget the diet hype, here's how it really works

    Let's take a closer look at some of the misconceptions about abdominal fat: how your body puts it on and how to get rid of it. This subject probably has a greater level of misunderstanding than practically any other health or fitness topic.
    The first misconception is that you can get rid of abdominal fat by working your abdominal muscles. This is based on some belief that fat is eliminated from a part of your body if you engage the muscles underneath that fat. It's the same idea that you will lose fat on your legs if you pump your legs all day. The truth of the matter is that your body decides where to put fat and where to remove it, and it's a system that is largely determined by your genetics. Your body wants to distribute fat based on a few clever strategies pioneered by your ancestors.

    First of all, your body stores fat in your midsection (your abdomen, hips or buttocks) due to basic biomechanics. The midsection of your body is the best place to store extra energy because it takes less energy to carry it around. Remember, fat storage is a survival strategy, so your body wants to maximize energy efficiency in the creation, storage and use of body fat.

    It wouldn't make sense to have a lot of extra fat on your fingers and toes because you'd have to swing those around when you moved and that would require extra caloric expenditure. So given that your body wants to store fat as a way to have portable energy, it makes perfect sense that it would prefer to store that fat in your midsection.

    Secondly, from an anthropological point of view, the placement of body fat also has some implications for mate selection. This is especially true in women, where fat is stored in locations like the hips, buttocks and breasts to actually create a more attractive physical body in order to attract a potential mate. In this way, the fat is stored in predetermined locations on your body for much the same reason that a male peacock has brightly colored feathers -- it's part of the mating game, so to speak. Exaggeration of physical traits is a common evolutionary strategy for mate attraction in primates, including humans. And body fat can be used cosmetically to pursue this strategy. (Of course, it all happens automatically. You don't have to "think" about where to put your body fat on any particular day, any more than you have to "think" about why you might sometimes feel attracted to another person.)

    Thirdly, your body stores fat wherever you have fat cells. This may sound obvious, but it's actually interesting when you realize that people who undergo liposuction to remove fat cells from their body end up causing a redistribution of fat to other locations that might be less desirable.

    For example, if a person follows an unhealthy lifestyle that results in the accumulation of excessive body fat, then they undergo liposuction to remove that body fat from their abdomen, but they continue to pursue the same overconsumption lifestyle that creates more body fat, then the body has to store that fat somewhere and since the fat cells have been removed from the abdomen, it's going to put that fat somewhere else like the knees, or under the chin, or under the arms and so on. Your body has to work with the fat cells that exist, and if you start removing certain fat cells, you end up with fat being stored in places you might not have expected.

    (This is one of the most common pitfalls of liposuction, by the way. It all sounds great until you look in the mirror one day and find that you have twenty pounds of body fat sagging off your knees...)


    How to really lose excess abdominal fat
    Now let's talk about losing abdominal fat. I see a lot of books and products that talk about reducing abdominal fat. They say "If you eat this way you'll lose abdominal fat first." Nonsense. There is no food, no exercise, and no herb that will cause your body to remove fat in one place versus another.
    If you want to reduce body fat, you need to start consuming fewer calories than you expend on a daily basis. In other words, have a calorie deficit. In time, your body will start converting fat into useable energy, and by doing so, fat stores will begin to vanish across your body. But they won't just magically disappear from one particular place.

    If you are a male, abdominal fat is probably the last fat that will disappear from your body. First your body will remove fat from your face and extremities, such as your arms and legs, then it will remove fat from your upper torso, your chest, upper thighs and buttocks, and lastly it will use the fat stored in your abdomen. There is no way that I'm aware of to alter this fat reduction pattern used by the human body (except to use so-called "topical cutting gel" products which are highly toxic fat solvents that should never be used by people who want to protect their health).

    This means if you are really serious about reducing body fat and you want to get rid of that abdominal fat, you're going to have to take a whole-body approach. You're going to have to get used to the idea that abdominal fat is probably going to be the last fat to go. This isn't what you wanted to hear, probably, but it's the truth.

    For women, this means the last place you're likely to lose the fat is on the hips and buttocks. This is something you may have already observed if you've ever tried to lose body fat, or if you've made some progress but couldn't seem to get rid of that last bit of so called "stubborn" body fat.

    I agree, it can be extremely difficult to get rid of the last 10 lbs of extra fat, and especially so if you consume any of the popular foods and beverages in the standard American diet (which greatly promote obesity and fat storage as described in the Grocery Warning book).

    I've also found from experience that it's virtually impossible to lose body fat if you don't engage in routine physical exercise. And strength training is included in that exercise. By engaging in strength training, you will end up burning fat for hours and even days after your exercise session. There are also a lot of things you can do in terms of controlling your consumption of carbohydrates and altering natural hormone levels in the body to help reduce body fat. I'm working on a book called "The Food Timing Diet" that addresses some good, solid strategies for slowly burning off body fat with food timing strategies and macronutrient cycling. But even this approach is no miracle.

    Some people talk about growth hormone and using HGH supplements or DHEA, and certainly those can help with the reduction of body fat by, in a sense, moderating the biological aging taking place in your body. But you're never going to have total success with fat loss unless you also engage in regular physical exercise and pursue a healthy diet.

    When it comes to abdominal fat, remember, there's no way to eliminate that fat by itself without taking a holistic, whole-body approach. In other words, there are no fat loss shortcuts. And even if you try to take a shortcut by undergoing liposuction, for example, you're still going to end up storing body fat somewhere else and it will probably look even worse than when it was on your abdomen or hips.

    So if you want to get rid of body fat, do it the right way: through diet and exercise, and not through cosmetic surgery or gimmicks that claim to eliminate fat from one specific area of your body. Fat loss takes real work, and even though there are some helpful appetite control tools available right now (like hoodia gordonii supplements), there are no magic pills that will do the work for you.

    This isn't what you'll hear from those selling fat loss supplements and diet pills, of course. But it's the truth as things stand today. Maybe we will see a revolutionary approach to fat loss at some point in the future (perhaps the PYY appetite control nasal spray, for example), but chances are that medical researchers will continue to be baffled by the human body's multiple, redundant calorie accumulation mechanisms that have so far made it impossible to develop a safe, effective fat loss wonder drug.

  • #2
    Good summary of things we know to be true. I'll send all the newbies who want a quick fix here for a reality check!

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    • #3
      nice post i like the part about lipo and the fat goes somewhere else also fat is stored in your mid section cuzz its easyest to carry there. things i didnt know.

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      • #4
        Sounds about right to me, now if someone could just write an article so I wont eat so damn much!

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        • #5
          great post...though i seriously wish spot reducing worked.

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          • #6
            good post man.

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            • #7
              Very good post and read. Hopefully n00bs will read this and understand that it takes more than just gear to burn fat.

              Remember kids, patience doesn't come in a bottle.

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              • #8
                Its a good article and introduciton but I have issues with it. Its missing quite a bit important info. I see some inaccuracies aswell.

                Originally posted by wheyman
                The first misconception is that you can get rid of abdominal fat by working your abdominal muscles.
                So true.

                Originally posted by wheyman
                It wouldn't make sense to have a lot of extra fat on your fingers and toes because you'd have to swing those around when you moved and that would require extra caloric expenditure. So given that your body wants to store fat as a way to have portable energy, it makes perfect sense that it would prefer to store that fat in your midsection.
                uh ok..I guess not very convicing or scientific. I believe it has more to do poor blood supply to the area, insulin sensitivity, leptin levels, and catacholemines (just to mention a few).

                Originally posted by wheyman
                if a person follows an unhealthy lifestyle that results in the accumulation of excessive body fat, then they undergo liposuction to remove that body fat from their abdomen, but they continue to pursue the same overconsumption lifestyle that creates more body fat, then the body has to store that fat somewhere and since the fat cells have been removed from the abdomen, it's going to put that fat somewhere else like the knees, or under the chin, or under the arms and so on. Your body has to work with the fat cells that exist, and if you start removing certain fat cells, you end up with fat being stored in places you might not have expected.
                Wrong. Isnt this contradictory. Wouldnt the fat cells would re-appear in the same areas they did before the lipo (like the abdomen) for the same reasons mentioned in the article such as evolution & survival, etc -lol. How would it be any different. It wouldnt. Why its almost believable is they leave this out -the body stores fat in abs, lower-back in males and hips thighs women first because these areas are more sensitive to insulin, less sensitive to catecholamines, and less visceral (bad blood supply and oxygen meaning less chance of mobilizing the fatty acids). Post lipo surgery or not this doesnt change...its going to the midsection first.

                Originally posted by wheyman
                If you want to reduce body fat, you need to start consuming fewer calories than you expend on a daily basis. In other words, have a calorie deficit. In time, your body will start converting fat into useable energy, and by doing so, fat stores will begin to vanish across your body. But they won't just magically disappear from one particular place.
                True. Also just keep in mind when you create a deficeincy you arent going to be building muscle and you WILL lose strength and size. Its on average a 3-1 fat to muscle ratio. Again the reason why it is stubborn is because it has bad blood supply etc. Dieting or cutting alone will help. There is plenty more you can do.


                Originally posted by wheyman
                If you are a male, abdominal fat is probably the last fat that will disappear from your body. First your body will remove fat from your face and extremities, such as your arms and legs, then it will remove fat from your upper torso, your chest, upper thighs and buttocks, and lastly it will use the fat stored in your abdomen. There is no way that I'm aware of to alter this fat reduction pattern used by the human body (except to use so-called "topical cutting gel" products which are highly toxic fat solvents that should never be used by people who want to protect their health).
                True because that is viceral fat which gets a good blood supply and is mobilized easily. The chances for fat oxidation is better with drugs such as Clen, ephedra, Thyroid, etc. The supplements do work along with cardio aid in the alpha 2 and beta-1/beta-2 receptors which employ catacholamine hormone (just to mention a few) breaks down fat stores especially in "stubborn" places. Its BS to say they dont.
                Last edited by NYCmitch25; 10-13-05, 02:12 PM.

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                • #9
                  [QUOTE=NYCmitch25]
                  Wrong. This is contradictory. Wouldnt the fat cells would apear in the same areas they did before (like the abdomen) for the same reasons mentioned such as evolution & survival etc. How would it be any different due to lipo - It wouldnt. Whats missing and important is the body stores fat here (abs, lower-back) first because these areas are more sensitive to insulin, less sensitive to catecholamines (, and get a poor blood supply (less visceral meaning less chance of mobilizing fatty acids). With or without lipo this doesnt change.

                  I agree. It is debated as to whether or not lip acutally "kills fat cells" or shrinks them like dieting would. If the fat cells were actually killed then it would be harder for the fat to return the previous area, but it would still return b/c of how the body works with insulin activity as mentioned.

                  There will always be debate to certain statements, but I think overall this article is a good starting point to every day questions asked by beginners concerning stomach fat.

                  WM

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                  • #10
                    [QUOTE=wheyman]
                    Originally posted by NYCmitch25
                    Wrong. This is contradictory. Wouldnt the fat cells would apear in the same areas they did before (like the abdomen) for the same reasons mentioned such as evolution & survival etc. How would it be any different due to lipo - It wouldnt. Whats missing and important is the body stores fat here (abs, lower-back) first because these areas are more sensitive to insulin, less sensitive to catecholamines (, and get a poor blood supply (less visceral meaning less chance of mobilizing fatty acids). With or without lipo this doesnt change.

                    I agree. It is debated as to whether or not lip acutally "kills fat cells" or shrinks them like dieting would. If the fat cells were actually killed then it would be harder for the fat to return the previous area, but it would still return b/c of how the body works with insulin activity as mentioned.

                    There will always be debate to certain statements, but I think overall this article is a good starting point to every day questions asked by beginners concerning stomach fat.

                    WM
                    It certainly is a good start you have put up a number of good posts lately. Thanks bro!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Whey good read and NYC good follow up,
                      reads and followups always give more room for sorting out truth

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