New, looking for advice on fat loss in stomach after surgery left me with no muscles there to work.
dmsherman5194
Posts: 3 Member
I have has two stomach surgeries that have left me with no muscles to work with to lose weight in that area. Looking for some advice on what I can do to help lose the fat there.
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The truth is you can't spot trim / spot lose weight - even if you had not had abdominal surgery.0
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Not 100% sure I read this right.
You can't spot reduce, so you don't have to utilize core muscles to lose stomach fat. Eat in a deficit and do the exercises you can. The fat is going to come off wherever your body decides, with the midsection usually being the last place.0 -
What do you mean no muscles? I've had 5 abdominal surgeries - I still have muscles. And you don't need muscle to lose weight in a specific area. You need a calorie deficit for all over fat loss.0
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TheVirgoddess wrote: »What do you mean no muscles? I've had 5 abdominal surgeries - I still have muscles. And you don't need muscle to lose weight in a specific area. You need a calorie deficit for all over fat loss.
I have read and been told over and over again including by trainers that once your stomach has been cut you lose those muscles leaving nothing to work with to tighten the abs back up. I have this over hang of skin and fat over the 12 inch area that was cut open that I cannot get rid of. What do you suggest for a calorie deficit for all over fat loss?0 -
Fat loss comes from what and how much you eat. Focus on your diet and you'll be able to lose fat.
As for the muscles of the stomach, after your doctor releases you to exercise, hit the weights (squat, deadlift, bench press, pull ups, and overhead press). The musculature of your core will develop to support that strength gain, and you'll retain more muscle as you lose fat.0 -
dmsherman5194 wrote: »TheVirgoddess wrote: »What do you mean no muscles? I've had 5 abdominal surgeries - I still have muscles. And you don't need muscle to lose weight in a specific area. You need a calorie deficit for all over fat loss.
I have read and been told over and over again including by trainers that once your stomach has been cut you lose those muscles leaving nothing to work with to tighten the abs back up. I have this over hang of skin and fat over the 12 inch area that was cut open that I cannot get rid of. What do you suggest for a calorie deficit for all over fat loss?
I have never heard anything like this. I have had 3 c-sections, a tubal, gallbladder removal... and that is just involving my stomach. Judging by all of the core workouts I have been doing and how sore I am the day after I'm pretty sure I still have muscle to work. Is it harder sometimes, yes, because it takes time for my body to heal from that, but it has and is healing. I also have the overhang, and it may be floppy and annoying, but it's getting smaller! If it never goes away and the weight has come off, then I will save to have it removed. Otherwise.. just keep working it! Calories in vs. calories out, and move your butt... that's the best advice I have for ya!0 -
dmsherman5194 wrote: »TheVirgoddess wrote: »What do you mean no muscles? I've had 5 abdominal surgeries - I still have muscles. And you don't need muscle to lose weight in a specific area. You need a calorie deficit for all over fat loss.
I have read and been told over and over again including by trainers that once your stomach has been cut you lose those muscles leaving nothing to work with to tighten the abs back up. I have this over hang of skin and fat over the 12 inch area that was cut open that I cannot get rid of. What do you suggest for a calorie deficit for all over fat loss?
As far as strength training, do what you can do. I've had a c-section and both my gallbladder and appendix removed. I've had no problems doing core work but I don't do crunches or sit-ups, anyway. They aren't any more effective than overall body movements for strengthening your core and you can't shrink by adding muscle under fat, regardless. You need to lose the fat which comes through your calorie deficit.
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