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Why Everything You Think About Body Fat Is Incomplete
Description
We've spent decades obsessing over weight loss, counting calories, and staring at BMI charts. All while overlooking what might be the most crucial metric of all: visceral fat proportion.
A groundbreaking study published in BMC Medicine has quietly revolutionized how we should think about our bodies, our health risks, and our approaches to wellness. And almost nobody is talking about it.
Here's what you need to know: It's not just how much visceral fat you have that matters—it's what proportion it makes up of your total abdominal fat. And when it comes to certain health metrics, that proportion might actually be more important than the total amount.
Let that sink in. The ratio matters more than the volume.
The Revelation Hidden in Plain Sight
Most health advice about visceral fat follows a familiar refrain: "Visceral fat bad. Less visceral fat good." But that's like saying "Water wet" and calling yourself a hydrologist.
The BMC Medicine study—which analyzed MRI data from 572 participants across two 18-month trials—tells a more nuanced story. Using precise imaging rather than unreliable proxies like waist circumference, researchers discovered something that upends conventional wisdom.
They separated visceral fat into two metrics: ... continue reading the article
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Independent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter. Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas.
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