Long-Term Exercisers Have Healthier Belly Fat, Even If Obese, Study Finds
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Regular exercise can change belly fat tissue, making it better at storing fat healthily, potentially enhancing overall metabolic health.
For people with obesity, the benefits of regular exercise extend far beyond weight loss. A recent study suggests that exercising regularly changes fat tissue in a way that allows any weight gained or regained to be stored more safely, compared to in those who do not exercise.
People who regularly exercise store excess fat under the skin rather than in or around vital organs, which reduces their risk of developing cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and liver disease.
“We can have better metabolic health as a consequence of exercise by making our fat tissue healthier,” principal investigator Jeffrey Horowitz told The Epoch Times.
People get fat from weight gain, and weight gain commonly happens due to less physical activity, eating too much, and aging.
Horowitz said that it is important to reframe the way people think about fat: “Fat tissue isn’t the reason we gain weight; it’s just a place where we store that extra energy and weight,” he said.
“If you have a safe place to store fat, like under the skin in the abdomen or lower body, it’s better than storing it in an excessive amount in your liver or heart or pancreas or other tissues where it could cause a lot more health challenges,” added Horowitz, who is also a professor of movement science at the University of Michigan School of Kinesiology.
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Regular Exercise Promotes Healthier Belly Fat
Exercise produced healthier fat that was less inflammatory and could be efficiently metabolized, the researchers found.Researchers compared two groups of adults with obesity: one group comprised 16 people who exercised at least four times a week for over two years while the other group had 16 people who did not exercise regularly. Participants were matched for body weight, fat levels, and sex. Fat tissue samples were collected from the belly area.
- Increased Blood Flow
- Less Rigidity
The fat tissue of regular exercisers was softer and more flexible compared to non-exercisers. Reduced rigidity helps fat cells expand more effectively. In regular exercisers, fat was more likely to be stored under the skin rather than around vital organs, where it can cause harm.
- Lower Inflammation
The researchers also grew fat tissue in the lab from cells collected from both exercisers and non-exercisers, and cells from the exercisers developed into a tissue that stored fat more effectively.
“Collectively, these factors suggest that fat tissue in exercisers may be metabolically healthier than in those who do not regularly exercise,” Cheehoon Ahn, the study’s first author who was a doctoral student at the University of Michigan and is now a postdoctoral research associate at Advent Health, told The Epoch Times in an email.
Safer Weight Gain
The enhanced quality of fat tissue observed in regular exercisers suggests that even if people with obesity gain weight, their fat is more likely to be stored in healthier, subcutaneous areas—under the skin—rather than around crucial organs. This shift can reduce the risk of obesity-related complications.“The bottom line is that living a physically active lifestyle can improve health by making our fat tissue healthier,” Horowitz said.
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Reasons of Benefit Unknown
“While our study highlights the benefits,” Ahn said, “we don’t exactly know how exercise induces these changes.” Hormonal shifts and molecular signaling between tissues likely play a key role in making fat tissue healthier, he noted.Horowitz told The Epoch Times that the research team is currently studying whether adding exercise to a weight loss program leads to better health outcomes, particularly when some of the weight is regained. This next study will compare the effects of weight loss achieved through diet alone versus diet combined with exercise, as well as examine how the fat tissue of people who exercise differs from that of those who do not.
Further research will also aim to determine whether specific types or intensities of exercise yield more significant results. Understanding these nuances will provide deeper insights into how exercise influences overall health and fat metabolism, Horwitz added.
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