Despite a worldwide obsession with diets and fitness regimes, many health professionals cannot correctly answer the question of where body fat goes when people lose weight. |
Despite a worldwide obsession with diets and fitness regimes, many
health professionals cannot correctly answer the question of where body
fat goes when people lose weight, a UNSW Australia study shows.
The most common misconception among doctors, dieticians and personal
trainers is that the missing mass has been converted into energy or
heat.
"There is surprising ignorance and confusion about the metabolic
process of weight loss," says Professor Andrew Brown, head of the UNSW
School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences.
"The correct answer is that most of the mass is breathed out as
carbon dioxide. It goes into thin air," says the study's lead author,
Ruben Meerman, a physicist and Australian TV science presenter.
In their paper, published in the British Medical Journal
today, the authors show that losing 10 kilograms of fat requires 29
kilograms of oxygen to be inhaled and that this metabolic process
produces 28 kilograms of carbon dioxide and 11 kilograms of water.
Mr Meerman became interested in the biochemistry of weight loss through personal experience.
"I lost 15 kilograms in 2013 and simply wanted to know where those
kilograms were going. After a self-directed, crash course in
biochemistry, I stumbled onto this amazing result," he says.
"With a worldwide obesity crisis occurring, we should all know the
answer to the simple question of where the fat goes. The fact that
almost nobody could answer it took me by surprise, but it was only when I
showed Andrew my calculations that we both realised how poorly this
topic is being taught."
The authors met when Mr Meerman interviewed Professor Brown in a
story about the science of weight loss for the Catalyst science program
on ABC TV in March this year.
"Ruben's novel approach to the biochemistry of weight loss was to
trace every atom in the fat being lost and, as far as I am aware, his
results are completely new to the field," says Professor Brown.
"He has also exposed a completely unexpected black hole in the
understanding of weight loss amongst the general public and health
professionals alike."
If you follow the atoms in 10 kilograms of fat as they are 'lost',
8.4 of those kilograms are exhaled as carbon dioxide through the lungs.
The remaining 1.6 kilograms becomes water, which may be excreted in
urine, faeces, sweat, breath, tears and other bodily fluids, the authors
report.
"None of this is obvious to people because the carbon dioxide gas we exhale is invisible," says Mr Meerman.
More than 50 per cent of the 150 doctors, dieticians and personal
trainers who were surveyed thought the fat was converted to energy or
heat.
"This violates the Law of Conservation of Mass. We suspect this
misconception is caused by the energy in/energy out mantra surrounding
weight loss," says Mr Meerman.
Some respondents thought the metabolites of fat were excreted in faeces or converted to muscle.
"The misconceptions we have encountered reveal surprising
unfamiliarity about basic aspects of how the human body works," the
authors say.
One of the most frequently asked questions the authors have
encountered is whether simply breathing more can cause weight loss. The
answer is no. Breathing more than required by a person's metabolic rate
leads to hyperventilation, which can result in dizziness, palpitations
and loss of consciousness.
The second most frequently asked question is whether weight loss can cause global warming.
"This reveals troubling misconceptions about global warming which is
caused by unlocking the ancient carbon atoms trapped underground in
fossilised organisms. The carbon atoms human beings exhale are returning
to the atmosphere after just a few months or years trapped in food that
was made by a plant," says Mr Meerman, who also presents the science of
climate change in high schools around Australia.
Mr Meerman and Professor Brown recommend that these basic concepts be
included in secondary school curricula and university biochemistry
courses to correct widespread misconceptions about weight loss among lay
people and health professionals.
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