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Almost nobody knows about lipid turnover…
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Lipid turnover gets rid of fat without diet or exercise
I was at the store the other day and overheard a couple of people talking.
The woman (maybe in her 40s or 50s) said to a much younger man, “Keeping weight off as I get older has not been as easy as when I was young.”
I chuckled, because this is a nearly universal experience. I work with many men – lots of them over the age of 50.
And, absolutely, keeping extra weight off can be a real struggle.
This is especially true for guys who have desk jobs.
Fortunately, there are a few biological hacks that help with keeping weight off as we age.
But I also think it’s important to know WHY it’s harder to maintain weight as we get older – and that it’s not just in your head.
There are several real physical factors that lead to weight gain as we age.
One is that, unless you are doing something to prevent it, you will lose muscle mass.
And that lost muscle mass makes it harder for your body to burn calories.
Another reason that was recently discovered is that your body actually turns over fat more slowly as you age.
Lipid turnover goes down as we age
It’s not in your head…
Even if you eat and exercise exactly the same way as you did when you were 20, you are likely to slowly gain weight once you are 40.
“Many people struggle to keep their weight in check as they get older. Now new research at Karolinska Institutet has uncovered why that is: Lipid turnover in the fat tissue decreases during aging and makes it easier to gain weight, even if we don’t eat more or exercise less than before. The study is published in the journal Nature Medicine.”
This was a small study, but it followed people over 13 years and found the same results in all 54 subjects – both men and women.
And all of them had a slowdown in how their bodies processed fat stores.
There were no exceptions – which is unusual in a study.
But it tells you that this is a normal physical process.
“The scientists studied the fat cells in 54 men and women over an average period of 13 years. In that time, all subjects, regardless of whether they gained or lost weight, showed decreases in lipid turnover in the fat tissue – that is the rate at which lipid (or fat) in the fat cells is removed and stored.”
People who didn’t eat less over this same time period gained weight.
Of course, if our fat cells are less efficient as we age, this isn’t surprising.
Those who didn’t compensate for that by eating less calories gained weight by an average of 20 percent.
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The good news is that there are ways to increase your lipid turnover.
One way to increase your lipid turnover as you age is to exercise more.
Exercise has a lot of other health benefits as well, but this is one that we don’t hear about a lot…
When we exercise, we can help our bodies process our fat stores more efficiently.
“Prior studies have shown that one way to speed up the lipid turnover in the fat tissue is to exercise more.”
I’ve found with myself and with my work with men that the exercise doesn’t even have to be all that strenuous.
Finding ways to fit in more walking can help a lot.
And if there is an activity you really enjoy, like hiking or dancing, increasing the frequency of doing that can help a great deal as well.
The thing I like most about exercising as a solution is that it doesn’t just burn more calories…
It actually helps to reset the way your body handles fat storage at a cellular level.
It doesn’t take much either.
Weight bearing exercises done for a few minutes can stimulate new muscle – and the muscles themselves secrete testosterone.
A pretty good deal…so long as you do not OVER-train, which almost everyone is doing…
To sum it up, as we get older it really is harder to keep weight off.
But exercise can help to reset the biological process that causes that.
Not too much exercise… Be active, but do a few minutes of load-bearing exercises each day or so.
If you do exercise you enjoy, then you are much more likely to stick with it.
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- Why people gain weight as they get older
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/09/190909193211.htm - New study shows why people gain weight as they get older
https://news.ki.se/new-study-shows-why-people-gain-weight-as-they-get-older
- Introduction to Lipids and Lipoproteins
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK305896/ - Lipids
https://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/lipids.htm