Where does fat go? Does it just dissentigrate or....

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  • RestartThisRight
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    YES! Some people are born with more than others. :P
  • xraychick77
    xraychick77 Posts: 1,775 Member
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    Without all the science jabber, Trigylcerides (the storage form of fat in adipose tissue) is burned producing energy and most of it results in CO2 and water production and the rest is recycled in the body for other uses.

    simplest way to explain..the doc has it!
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,568 Member
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    Can someone tell me where fat goes when it's "lost"? Is it flushed out with pee or does it just dissentigrate?
    Lost through urine, excrement and energy use.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
  • Captain_Tightpants
    Captain_Tightpants Posts: 2,215 Member
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    When fat leaves your body, it generally boards a bus and goes right back to it's parents place...

    Hamburger_University_0.jpg
  • Trechechus
    Trechechus Posts: 2,819 Member
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    From my biochem years ago, it gets metabolized to carbon dioxide and water.

    This. It's broken up into simpler molecules and fed into the Krebs cycle (Which is what your cells use to make useful energy)
  • Sandytoes71
    Sandytoes71 Posts: 463 Member
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    So, if I drink more water and thus urinate more, will I flush more fat out?? I can't do anything about exhaling more CO2. This might be a stupid question, but would love a straight answer anyway, lol. Thanks for all of ur responses :)
  • Dave198lbs
    Dave198lbs Posts: 8,810 Member
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    So, if I drink more water and thus urinate more, will I flush more fat out?? I can't do anything about exhaling more CO2. This might be a stupid question, but would love a straight answer anyway, lol. Thanks for all of ur responses :)

    not s stupid question but no. the matter in the fat cell needs to be required (thru normal body functions and exercise) then it is used and eventually some of the residue is excreted.
  • gleechick609
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    You know how the tooth fairy leaves us a shiny dollar when we lose our baby teeth? The fat loss fairy comes and sprinkles magic dust on our scales to make the number go down! Shhhhhhh!! :wink:

    In all seriousness, xraychick has the simplest correct answer!
  • buckystars
    buckystars Posts: 129 Member
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    Ooo! Interesting questions! Never thought about it before. Interesting answers, too.
  • tataliciousd89
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    It is metabolized into water and carbon dioxide while producing a ton of energy. The adipocytes (fat cells) dont go away, they just unload all of the stored triglycerides which makes them a lot smaller.
  • sabyars
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    LOVE THIS!! I was just thinking about this at work today!!
  • Sandytoes71
    Sandytoes71 Posts: 463 Member
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    Got it! :) Thanks bunches!
  • IndyInk
    IndyInk Posts: 212
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    The guys poop it out. Of course girls don't poop, so ours just floats up into the clouds, which is why it's so cloudy in the winter time... because we're losing all the fat in prep for bikini season.
  • led6777
    led6777 Posts: 268
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    The guys poop it out. Of course girls don't poop, so ours just floats up into the clouds, which is why it's so cloudy in the winter time... because we're losing all the fat in prep for bikini season.

    lol. just to be clear though, gentlemen: WOMEN POOP.
  • anna_love
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    MMM I WOULD LOVE TO KNOW THAT TO
  • beduffbrickie
    beduffbrickie Posts: 646 Member
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    When you "lose" body fat, the fat cell (also called an adipocyte) does not go anywhere or "move into the muscle cell to be burned. The fat cell itself, (unfortunately) stays right where it was - under the skin in your thighs, stomach, hips, arms, etc., and on top of the muscles - which is why you can't see muscle "definition" when your body fat is high.

    The fat is not burned right there in the fat cell,
    it must be liberated from the fat cell.

    Fat is stored inside the fat cell in the form of triaglycerol. The fat is not burned right there in the fat cell, it must be liberated from the fat cell through somewhat complex hormonal/enzymatic pathways. When stimulated to do so, the fat cell simply releases its contents (triaglycerol) into the bloodstream as free fatty acids (FFA's), and they are transported through the blood to the tissues where the energy is needed.

    A typical young male adult stores about 60,000 to 100,000 calories of energy in body fat cells. What triggers the release of all these stored fatty acids from the fat cell? Simple: When your body needs energy because you're consuming fewer calories than you are burning (an energy deficit), then your body releases hormones and enzymes that signal your fat cells to release your fat reserves instead of keeping them in storage.

    For stored fat to be liberated from the fat cell, hydrolysis (lipolysis or fat breakdown), splits the molecule of triaglycerol into glycerol and three fatty acids. An important enzyme called hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) is the catalyst for this reaction. The stored fat (energy) gets released into the bloodstream as FFA's and they are shuttled off to the muscles where the energy is needed. As blood flow increases to the active muscles, more FFA's are delivered to the muscles that need them.

    An important enzyme called lipoprotein lipase (LPL), then helps the FFA's get inside the mitochondria of the muscle cell, where the FFA's can be burned for energy. If you've ever taken a biology class, then you've probably heard of the mitochondria. This is the "cellular powerhouse" where energy production takes place and this is where the FFA's go to be burned for energy.

    When the FFA's are released from the fat cell, the fat cell shrinks and that's why you look leaner when you lose body fat - because the fat cell is now smaller. A small or "empty" fat cell is what you're after if you want the lean, defined look.

    It was once believed that the number of fat cells could not increase after adulthood, only the size of the fat cells could increase (or decrease). We now know that fat cells can indeed increase both in size (hypertrophy) and in number (hyperplasia) and that they are more likely to increase in number at certain times and under certain circumstances, such as:

    During late childhood and early puberty
    During pregnancy
    During adulthood when extreme amounts of weight are gained.

    Some people are genetically predisposed to have more fat cells than others and women have more fat cells than men. (learn about your body type) An infant usually has about 5 - 6 billion fat cells. This number increases during early childhood and puberty, and a healthy adult with normal body composition has about 25 to 30 billion fat cells. A typical overweight adult has around 75 billion fat cells. But in the case of severe obesity, this number can be as high as 250 to 300 billion!

    The average size (weight) of an adult fat cell is about 0.6 micrograms, but they can vary in size from 0.2 micograms to 0.9 micrograms. An overweight person's fat cells can be up to three times larger than a person with ideal body composition.

    Remember, body fat is basically just a reserve source of energy and fat cells are the like the storage tanks. Unlike a gas tank in your car which is fixed in size, however, fat cells can expand or shrink in size depending on how "filled" they are.

    Picture a balloon that is not inflated: It's tiny when not filled with air - maybe the size of your thumb. When you blow it up with air, it can expand 10 or 12 times it's normal size, because it simply fills up. That's what happens to fat cells: They start as nearly empty fat storage "tanks" (when you are lean), and when energy intake exceeds your needs, your fat cells "fill up" and "stretch out" like balloons filling up with jelly (not a pretty picture, is it?)

    So you don't actually "lose" fat cells, you "empty out" fat cells.
    Take-home lessons:

    Calories count! The signal that triggers your body to release adipose from fat cells is an energy deficit... you have to burn more than you eat. More info: burning fat without burning muscle article.
    Cut calories conservatively. Starving yourself may cause quick weightloss at first, but never works long term because it actually decreases the activity of fat burning enzymes that release fat from the cells. to avoid this "starvation mode" use exercise to BURN THE FAT, not very low calorie crash diets.
    Get control of your weight now. If you are gaining weight, and especially if your weight is climbing upwards out of control, make a decision to STOP RIGHT NOW. Your fat cells might be multiplying, making it more difficult to burn fat in the future. NOW is the time!
    If you've already lost weight, you must be forever diligent. Your fat cells are not gone, they have merely "shrunk" or "emptied out." Fitness is not a 12 week program, its a lifestyle. To stay lean you have to eat clean and stay active
    Genetics are only a minor factor. You may not have control over how many fat cells you were born with, but you do control the major factors that determine how much fat you store: lifestyle, exercise, nutrition, mental attitude.



    Genetics are not an excuse. The past is not an excuse. Your present condition is not an excuse. You can either make excuses or get results, but you can't do both.smile
  • cassuccino
    cassuccino Posts: 702 Member
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    Great question!! And awesome answers!! It was nice to know they shrink (though, I'd prefer that they just disappeared altogether!! =) But I really liked that the question was answered as to how the fat is burned / used in the body. Thank you for asking and answering everyone!! =)
  • PrairieRoseNE
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    When you "lose" body fat, the fat cell (also called an adipocyte) does not go anywhere or "move into the muscle cell to be burned. The fat cell itself, (unfortunately) stays right where it was - under the skin in your thighs, stomach, hips, arms, etc., and on top of the muscles - which is why you can't see muscle "definition" when your body fat is high.

    The fat is not burned right there in the fat cell,
    it must be liberated from the fat cell.

    Fat is stored inside the fat cell in the form of triaglycerol. The fat is not burned right there in the fat cell, it must be liberated from the fat cell through somewhat complex hormonal/enzymatic pathways. When stimulated to do so, the fat cell simply releases its contents (triaglycerol) into the bloodstream as free fatty acids (FFA's), and they are transported through the blood to the tissues where the energy is needed.

    A typical young male adult stores about 60,000 to 100,000 calories of energy in body fat cells. What triggers the release of all these stored fatty acids from the fat cell? Simple: When your body needs energy because you're consuming fewer calories than you are burning (an energy deficit), then your body releases hormones and enzymes that signal your fat cells to release your fat reserves instead of keeping them in storage.

    For stored fat to be liberated from the fat cell, hydrolysis (lipolysis or fat breakdown), splits the molecule of triaglycerol into glycerol and three fatty acids. An important enzyme called hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) is the catalyst for this reaction. The stored fat (energy) gets released into the bloodstream as FFA's and they are shuttled off to the muscles where the energy is needed. As blood flow increases to the active muscles, more FFA's are delivered to the muscles that need them.

    An important enzyme called lipoprotein lipase (LPL), then helps the FFA's get inside the mitochondria of the muscle cell, where the FFA's can be burned for energy. If you've ever taken a biology class, then you've probably heard of the mitochondria. This is the "cellular powerhouse" where energy production takes place and this is where the FFA's go to be burned for energy.

    When the FFA's are released from the fat cell, the fat cell shrinks and that's why you look leaner when you lose body fat - because the fat cell is now smaller. A small or "empty" fat cell is what you're after if you want the lean, defined look.

    It was once believed that the number of fat cells could not increase after adulthood, only the size of the fat cells could increase (or decrease). We now know that fat cells can indeed increase both in size (hypertrophy) and in number (hyperplasia) and that they are more likely to increase in number at certain times and under certain circumstances, such as:

    During late childhood and early puberty
    During pregnancy
    During adulthood when extreme amounts of weight are gained.

    Some people are genetically predisposed to have more fat cells than others and women have more fat cells than men. (learn about your body type) An infant usually has about 5 - 6 billion fat cells. This number increases during early childhood and puberty, and a healthy adult with normal body composition has about 25 to 30 billion fat cells. A typical overweight adult has around 75 billion fat cells. But in the case of severe obesity, this number can be as high as 250 to 300 billion!

    The average size (weight) of an adult fat cell is about 0.6 micrograms, but they can vary in size from 0.2 micograms to 0.9 micrograms. An overweight person's fat cells can be up to three times larger than a person with ideal body composition.

    Remember, body fat is basically just a reserve source of energy and fat cells are the like the storage tanks. Unlike a gas tank in your car which is fixed in size, however, fat cells can expand or shrink in size depending on how "filled" they are.

    Picture a balloon that is not inflated: It's tiny when not filled with air - maybe the size of your thumb. When you blow it up with air, it can expand 10 or 12 times it's normal size, because it simply fills up. That's what happens to fat cells: They start as nearly empty fat storage "tanks" (when you are lean), and when energy intake exceeds your needs, your fat cells "fill up" and "stretch out" like balloons filling up with jelly (not a pretty picture, is it?)

    So you don't actually "lose" fat cells, you "empty out" fat cells.
    Take-home lessons:

    Calories count! The signal that triggers your body to release adipose from fat cells is an energy deficit... you have to burn more than you eat. More info: burning fat without burning muscle article.
    Cut calories conservatively. Starving yourself may cause quick weightloss at first, but never works long term because it actually decreases the activity of fat burning enzymes that release fat from the cells. to avoid this "starvation mode" use exercise to BURN THE FAT, not very low calorie crash diets.
    Get control of your weight now. If you are gaining weight, and especially if your weight is climbing upwards out of control, make a decision to STOP RIGHT NOW. Your fat cells might be multiplying, making it more difficult to burn fat in the future. NOW is the time!
    If you've already lost weight, you must be forever diligent. Your fat cells are not gone, they have merely "shrunk" or "emptied out." Fitness is not a 12 week program, its a lifestyle. To stay lean you have to eat clean and stay active
    Genetics are only a minor factor. You may not have control over how many fat cells you were born with, but you do control the major factors that determine how much fat you store: lifestyle, exercise, nutrition, mental attitude.



    Genetics are not an excuse. The past is not an excuse. Your present condition is not an excuse. You can either make excuses or get results, but you can't do both.smile

    This was great info - thanks for taking time to share!!! I leaned alot and I'm grateful :)