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 Post subject: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 8:47 am 
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There is a very interesting article I found on howstuffworks.com which I am posting here:

How Fat Cells Work

by Craig C. Freudenrich, Ph.D.


Where's the Fat?

Fat, or adipose tissue, is found in several places in your body. Generally, fat is found underneath your skin (subcutaneous fat). There's also some on top of each of your kidneys. Other locations depend upon whether you are a man or woman:

*An adult man tends to carry body fat in his chest, abdomen and buttocks, producing an "apple" shape.

*An adult woman tends to carry fat in her breasts, hips, waist and buttocks, creating a "pear" shape.

*The difference in fat location comes from the sex hormones estrogen and testosterone.


Your body contains two types of fat tissue:

White fat - important in energy metabolism, heat insulation and mechanical cushioning.
Brown fat - found mostly in newborn babies, between the shoulders; important for thermogenesis (making heat).

Fat tissue is made up of fat cells. Fat cells are a unique type of cell. You can think of a fat cell as a tiny plastic bag that holds a drop of fat:

White fat cells are large cells that have very little cytoplasm, only 15 percent cell volume, a small nucleus and one large fat droplet that makes up 85 percent of cell volume.

Brown fat cells are somewhat smaller, are loaded with mitochondria and are composed of several smaller fat droplets. The mitochondria are able to generate heat. Fat cells are formed in the developing fetus during the third trimester of pregnancy, and later at the onset of puberty, when the sex hormones "kick in." It is during puberty that the differences in fat distribution between men and women begin to take form. One amazing fact is that fat cells do not multiply after puberty -- as your body stores more fat, the number of fat cells remains the same. Each fat cell simply gets bigger! In addition to fat tissue, some fat is stored in the liver, and an even smaller amount in muscle.

How Fat Enters Your Body
When you eat food that contains fat, mostly triglycerides, it goes through your stomach and intestines. In the intestines, the following happens:

1. Large fat droplets get mixed with bile salts from the gall bladder in a process called emulsification. The mixture breaks up the large droplets into several smaller droplets called micelles, increasing the fat's surface area.

2. The pancreas secretes enzymes called lipases that attack the surface of each micelle and break the fats down into their parts, glycerol and fatty acids.

3.These parts get absorbed into the cells lining the intestine.

4. In the intestinal cell, the parts are reassembled into packages of fat molecules (triglycerides) with a protein coating called chylomicrons. The protein coating makes the fat dissolve more easily in water.

5. The chylomicrons are released into the lymphatic system -- they do not go directly into the bloodstream because they are too big to pass through the wall of the capillary.

6. The lymphatic system eventually merges with the veins, at which point the chylomicrons pass into the bloodstream.


You might be wondering why fat molecules get broken down into glycerol and fatty acids if they're just going to be rebuilt. This is because fat molecules are too big to easily cross cell membranes. So when passing from the intestine through the intestinal cells into the lymph, or when crossing any cell barrier, the fats must be broken down. But, when fats are being transported in the lymph or blood, it is better to have a few, large fat molecules than many smaller fatty acids, because the larger fats do not "attract" as many excess water molecules by osmosis as many smaller molecules would.

How Fat is Stored in Your Body

Chylomicrons do not last long in the bloodstream -- only about eight minutes -- because enzymes called lipoprotein lipases break the fats into fatty acids. Lipoprotein lipases are found in the walls of blood vessels in fat tissue, muscle tissue and heart muscle. The activity of lipoprotein lipases depends upon the levels of insulin in the body. If insulin is high, then the lipases are highly active; if insulin is low, the lipases are inactive.

The fatty acids are then absorbed from the blood into fat cells, muscle cells and liver cells. In these cells, under stimulation by insulin, fatty acids are made into fat molecules and stored as fat droplets.

It is also possible for fat cells to take up glucose and amino acids, which have been absorbed into the bloodstream after a meal, and convert those into fat molecules. The conversion of carbohydrates or protein into fat is 10 times less efficient than simply storing fat in a fat cell, but the body can do it. If you have 100 extra calories in fat (about 11 grams) floating in your bloodstream, fat cells can store it using only 2.5 calories of energy. On the other hand, if you have 100 extra calories in glucose (about 25 grams) floating in your bloodstream, it takes 23 calories of energy to convert the glucose into fat and then store it. Given a choice, a fat cell will grab the fat and store it rather than the carbohydrates because fat is so much easier to store.

It is important to note that as your body stores more fat, the number of fat cells remains the same; each fat cell simply gets bigger.

Hormones That Act Opposite to Insulin
When you are not eating, your body is not absorbing food. If your body is not absorbing food, there is little insulin in the blood. However, your body is always using energy; and if you're not absorbing food, this energy must come from internal stores of complex carbohydrates, fats and proteins. Under these conditions, various organs in your body secrete hormones:

pancreas - glucagon
pituitary gland - growth hormone
pituitary gland - ACTH (adrenocorticotropic hormone)
adrenal gland - epinephrine (adrenaline)
thyroid gland - thyroid hormone

These hormones act on cells of the liver, muscle and fat tissue, and have the opposite effects of insulin.


How Your Body Breaks Down Fat

When you are not eating, or you are exercising, your body must draw on its internal energy stores of complex carbohydrates, fats and proteins. Your body's prime source of energy is glucose. In fact, some cells in your body, such as brain cells, can get energy only from glucose.

The first line of defense in maintaining energy is to break down carbohydrates, or glycogen, into simple glucose molecules -- this process is called glycogenolysis. Next, your body breaks down fats into glycerol and fatty acids in the process of lipolysis. The fatty acids can then be broken down directly to get energy, or can be used to make glucose through a multi-step process called gluconeogenesis. In gluconeogenesis, amino acids can also be used to make glucose.

In the fat cell, other types of lipases work to break down fats into fatty acids and glycerol. These lipases are activated by various hormones, such as glucagon, epinephrine and growth hormone. The resulting glycerol and fatty acids are released into the blood, and travel to the liver through the bloodstream. Once in the liver, the glycerol and fatty acids can be either further broken down or used to make glucose.

Brown Fat: Making Heat


When you are first born, your body does not have much white fat to help insulate and retain body heat; although there are white fat cells, there is not much fat stored in them. A newborn baby produces heat (thermogenesis) primarily by breaking down fat molecules into fatty acids in brown fat cells. Instead of those fatty acids leaving the brown fat cell, as happens in white fat cells, they get further broken down in the mitochondria and their energy is released directly as heat. This same process occurs in hibernating animals, which have more brown fat than humans. Once the newborn baby starts eating more, developing layers of white fat, the brown fat goes away. Adult humans have little or no brown fat.


Losing Weight and Losing Fat

Your weight is determined by the rate at which you store energy from the food that you eat, and the rate at which you use that energy. Most experts agree that the way to maintain a healthy weight is:

Eat a balanced diet - appropriate amounts glucose, fat and protein IMO, this can take the forums of many different macronutrient ratios, be it a ckd, a 40/40/20........or something different.

Do not eat excessively - for most people, a diet of 1,500 to 2,000 calories a day is sufficient to maintain a healthy weight. This can really differ depending on one's LBM and overall motabolism, tweaking of any diet is MUST !

Exercise regularly, ALSO A MUST !!!


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 10:09 am 
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Great post, M_Ali, made this one sticky!

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 11:58 pm 
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wow very useful info thanks

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 06, 2008 9:00 am 
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hello ...
thank you for this article i read it and it was very interesting...
i learned one or two things about fat - and i also found interesting stuff on DesiFitness . i think that nutrition is the must important thing when you are working out!
thank you
nirp


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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:21 pm 
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Types of fat and which is the best?

3.1 Highly Recommended for Health:-
i. Olive Oil - The best of all oils. It does not absorb in our body.
ii. Fish Oil - Omega 3 (contained in NI's Circulytes) haspoly-unsaturated fat. It's good for our brain cells.
iii. Peanut Oil - It contains Vitamin E. A small dosage is recommended only.
3.2 Not Recommended for Health
i Vegetable Fat - Palm oil is worst than coconut oil. It is high in cholesterol and highly unsaturated.
ii Coconut Oil - It has saturated fat.

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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:30 pm 
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How is coconut oil bad? I dont understand.


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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Thu Nov 13, 2008 3:23 am 
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Great posting.Thanks.

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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Thu Nov 13, 2008 12:19 pm 
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vandana wrote:
How is coconut oil bad? I dont understand.


Actually coconut oil is not bad. Its just that it contains saturated fat is why some people avoid it. I would say that as long as you're doing your workouts and watching calories, coconut oil is not bad. In fact the saturated fats in coconut oil may aid adding muscle.

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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 5:52 pm 
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I'd love to see this expanded by someone explaining the difference between the types of fat (unsaturated, saturated, etc.). I know we're told to avoid saturated fat but what makes it saturated vs. unsaturated and why is one worse than the other?


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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Wed Nov 19, 2008 6:09 am 
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Here you go...

Saturated fats

Saturated fats are mainly animal fats found in high quantities in meat, dairy products like full-fat milk, cheese and butter, poultry skin, egg yolks. Some plant foods are also high in saturated fats, for example, coconut oil and palm oil. A diet rich in this type of fat will increase your cholesterol levels and the risk of heart disease.

Unsaturated fats

When used in place for saturated fats, unsaturated fats can help lower cholesterol and maintain a healthy heart. Good sources of unsaturated fats are vegetable oils like sunflower, soya, olive oils and avocado pears. As well as cutting down your fat intake, try to eat foods containing unsaturated fats (good fats) instead of saturated fats (bad fats).

I hope it gave you a general idea...I can go on and on but this is at its best....

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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Wed Nov 19, 2008 7:51 am 
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So it sounds like unsaturated fats do not have cholesterol, right? That makes sense. I've been focusing on my total fat intake and keeping it to a very small percentage of my daily intake. I can see that I need to separate that further so that I'm getting the right type of fats as well. Thanks for the explanation!


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 Post subject: Re: Understanding the science behind fat
PostPosted: Thu Nov 20, 2008 11:10 am 
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FitOver40 wrote:
So it sounds like unsaturated fats do not have cholesterol, right? That makes sense. I've been focusing on my total fat intake and keeping it to a very small percentage of my daily intake. I can see that I need to separate that further so that I'm getting the right type of fats as well. Thanks for the explanation!


Good question I would also like to know the answer


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