I was wondering if your body gets whatever is considers the “low hanging fruit” first and would remove visceral fat last.

If so are there targeted diets for that specific fat?

  • @spiffy_spaceman
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    716 months ago

    No. You cannot target areas to lean out. This also holds for exercise: doing sit-ups will not burn the fat off your abs. The fat will also not necessarily come off evenly. Sometimes it does, sometimes the saddlebags stay until the bitter end even when your ribs are clearly visible. Genetics does play a role, but it can be dealt with.

    (I’m a trainer and physiologist and helping people to lose fat is something I do.)

    • @angrystego
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      136 months ago

      It’s true that doing sit-ups won’t help you target your belly fat, but it does make your abdominal muscles stronger and more able to keep your belly from protruding, so in effect it can make your belly look much flatter even without losing the fat.

      • @spiffy_spaceman
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        26 months ago

        Agree: for most people, the beer gut is more pronounced because of the laxity of the front abs (also causing a hyper extended spine which causes back pain), it’s not all just fat. So, proper training and strengthening of the abs will help pull those things back in line, but won’t do much for burning off fat.

        • @RedAggroBest
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          6 months ago

          also causing a hyper extended spine which causes back pain

          I’m a massage therapist for context. If I had a dollar for every client I’ve had that I wish I could tell “Your back would feel better if you had any strength in your abs and something more than a Hank Hill ass” I’d be able to afford a very long vacation

    • @[email protected]
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      116 months ago

      It’s so confusing when the OP puts opposite questions in their title and their post.

      I just read the title, then saw your comment, and was confused why you said “No” then explained how the answer is “yes”. Then I read the post to see OP mixed things up, lol

      • @RBWells
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        16 months ago

        What does that mean?

          • @[email protected]
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            16 months ago

            Interesting. Is there a specific estrogen that causes that? I know that I used to get Arimidex (an aromatase inhibitor) from my doctor along with my weekly testosterone cypionate shot to block the aromatization into estradiol.

            I know that excess estradiol levels can do other weird things in men too, like gynecomastia.

          • @RBWells
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            6 months ago

            Plenty of women put on belly fat too though. Most of us aren’t the hourglass type. I do understand what you are saying though, thanks.

  • FuglyDuck
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    446 months ago

    It’s different for everyone. There’s no real way to control it, and anyone telling you otherwise is full of it.

    Not by diet or by exercise.

      • FuglyDuck
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        56 months ago

        Well, the can also harden and mold said fat now.

        Looks weird as hell, though.

  • Ryru Grr
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    326 months ago

    BS Biology, former ISSA trainer: The simple answer is - fat mobilizes globally, prioritized by access to circulation. The last 3.5% of body fat is brown adipose, which you can’t lose, but if you could, you’d die from hypothermia.

    • @[email protected]
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      66 months ago

      Cool, I’ve got a related question. Do people have varying amounts of brown adipose and can they develop more of it through training? I’ve heard that exposure to cold for long periods of time causes your body to produce more brown adipose fat.

      • Ryru Grr
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        106 months ago

        Good question. It’s very likely safe to assume that we have an adaptive variance for these kinds of things, but it would still be a very small range. If you’ve heard it, it was probably supported by a study that indicates that correlation. For the most part, it’s something you’ll almost never even see. Iirc, the minimum healthy, functional bmi for men is 5%, 12% for women, as I was taught years ago. Anything below those ranges and things start to get weird, or it would take great effort and water/diet restrictions to maintain. The point being, anyone who says they’re 0%, or even like 3%, has no idea what they’re talking about. Thanks for having this discussion with me!

        • @[email protected]
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          36 months ago

          I think that some bodybuilders get to close to that minimum at competition, but they’re also really close to death. And a few have died due to the side effects of the drugs they take to get down that low (esp. diuretics). This might be different now though; HGH has been doing weird things to pro-level BBers. Used to be that they’d use shit like 2, 4-dinitrophenol (DNP), which does really weird shit to your metabolism and can very, very easily kill you if you dose too high. Especially since it takes about two weeks for that dose to catch up to you.

        • Clay_pidgin
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          26 months ago

          I was at 7% (measured on a fancy scale, not the bathtub method) as a male high school long distance runner and I was basically a fastish skeleton. I don’t think that would be a healthy BMI for me twenty years later, even if I could maintain it!

      • @Buddahriffic
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        36 months ago

        I was advised by a doctor to turn the water to cold periodically in the shower to increase the amount of brown fat the body produces. I take it with a grain of salt, but cold tolerance does seem to be a thing and that could be a mechanism for it.

    • @[email protected]
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      36 months ago

      Why hypothermia? I thought fat is needed for hormones to work correctly and going below 4% will deregulate your entire system.

      • Ryru Grr
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        66 months ago

        You kind of answered your own question. There are a lot of conditions and feedbacks needed for stasis. As any are pushed to or beyond their limits, a cascade occurs, having catastrophic effects. Body temp regulation is one of the most dire, as we can’t survive for long below a certain temp. Regarding that, burn victims can actually die from hypothermia if not treated immediately following 3rd degree burns, due to the amount of fat and skin cells lost to burns. I hope some of this made sense. I’m digging deep to remember, but it’s been a while. Cheers

  • @[email protected]
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    196 months ago

    Usually on diets where you go from a carb heavy regimen to less carbs:

    • first you lose water weight as electrolytes start to balance due to the change in insulin levels

    • the body removes fat from organs as first priority (sometimes called visceral fat). The body does not want to store fat in organs, but it does so only if it can’t put fat anywhere else. Once you start to lose weight it comes from here first.

    • then we are at generalized weight loss, which is different for everyone.

  • Nomecks
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    6 months ago

    You can somewhat target certain types of fat if you’re a heavy drinker and stop drinking.

    • @QuarterSwede
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      76 months ago

      Especially soda. Men literally drop pounds after stopping within weeks.

        • @QuarterSwede
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          6 months ago

          At 40g of sugar for 12oz/355ml you bet. It’s way worse than people realize.

          • @[email protected]
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            16 months ago

            Yes, but alcohol causes a specific type of fatty build-up around the liver area IIRC.

            Just having a lot of sugar wouldn’t do the same thing in the same way

  • @itscozydownhere
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    106 months ago

    Depends on your DNA AFAIK and you can’t really decide

  • @RBWells
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    96 months ago

    It is to some extent a last in, first out inventory system. So if you only recently put on weight in the middle then yes likely you will lose that first.

    If you only/mostly have excess fat in your belly, yes you will lose more of that, but no, you can’t for example keep the fat on your boobs and ass and lose it only in your belly. No.

  • Philo
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    6 months ago

    In general, what went on first, comes off last.