Tag Archive for: intramuscular fat

The Bottom Line on Belly Fat

Our pretend daughter Jamie slow-cooked a roast for Memorial Day, and it was delicious, the best she’s ever done. She does them very well to begin with, so what made this one so good? Fat. It was a chuck roast. What made it so good was not the fat that you could see, it was the intramuscular fat you really can’t see when it’s cooked. The marbling you see before cooking? That’s more like what I mean, but some fat is so woven into the muscle you can’t see it even then. Why on earth am I talking about chuck roast? It’s because we humans are well marbled as we age, but in our case, it’s not a good thing.

I’ve told you about subcutaneous and visceral fat, but there’s one more type: intramuscular fat. Because we are so sedentary, we have plenty of it, and the more sedentary we are, the more intramuscular fat we have. While it could be a readily available supply of fuel, it’s a sign of muscle loss and sedentary living.

How can we tell whether our fat is located under our skin or around our organs? The only definitive way is with a CAT or PET scan. Dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) can be used to determine body fat, but it’s not as precise on the location.

Let’s make it simple. Stand up. Contract your abdominal muscles as tight as you can. Now grab your belly fat, opening your hand as far as you have to get a good hold. If you seem to have more fat in your hands but there doesn’t seem to be much under the muscle, you most likely have more under the skin than under the muscle. If you can’t grab much fat in your hands but you still have a large waist, it’s mostly visceral fat.

While not exactly a scientific method, it can give you an idea of where you stand. And this doesn’t count the marbling effect. For me, it’s almost all subcutaneous fat I can grab.


The Bottom Line

How do you get rid of belly fat? Eat less. Eat better. Move more.

Yes, you’ve heard that before, but here’s why it’s the solution to this problem:

  • Eating less will help you lose fat from under the skin and under the muscle.
  • Eating better means you will be eating fewer refined carbohydrates, and that can benefit your visceral fat.
  • Exercise will help the intramuscular fat because you’ll use it as fuel. It will help the subcutaneous fat because you’ll be burning calories—and yes, do your crunches and leg lifts to strengthen your core. But the visceral fat will benefit the most from exercise because exercise can help use the hormones it produces and move your metabolic function more toward normal.

Find a way to eat less, eat better, and move more that suits your lifestyle. It may be completely different from what works for your best friend or your Aunt Mary, but it will work for you. For many people, my Optimal Performance Program is helping them achieve results they haven’t gotten any other way. But whatever approach you use, you must do something; when I say the guy in the photo has a killer belly, I mean it literally. The answer isn’t a pill or a special food; it’s the effort you put into it.

What are you prepared to do today?

Dr. Chet