Belly fat is more than just an aesthetic problem

95993741_MDo you look in the mirror and see a little pudge around the waist and frown because of how you look? Perhaps you should be frowning not for how you look, but for what that extra bit of weight is doing to the inside of your body. Excess body fat around your belly and waist is called visceral fat.

There are two types of fat, subcutaneous, which is external fat, the kind you can pinch with your finger, and visceral, which is more of a silent killer. Visceral fat lives within your body, and not just in your belly, but it also collects around your organs. To put it frankly, visceral fat is not good.

In many cases, when you are struggling with a round mid-section, you may also have a fatty liver, which can be determined through simple tests.

To get rid of this unwanted belly fat, you will want to watch what you eat, incorporate regular exercise (high-intensity workouts, especially), and limit the amount of sugar and alcohol you consume. Rather than indulging in that extra piece of cake or having that second or third beer, why not go for a leafy green or down a glass of water instead?

Furthermore, are you eating more carbs than protein? Put down the bag of chips and go for a helping of lentils or other legumes. Proteins that are rich in the right kind of fatty acids go a long way to keeping your waistline trim. Cold-water fish like salmon, cod, and steelhead trout do the trick, as does grass-fed beef, elk, and bison. Or, consider going vegetarian!

If that’s too drastic, try limiting or removing gluten and dairy from your diet. Research shows that a gluten-heavy diet is bad for your mid-section, practically opening the door for visceral fat to form. Dairy can lead to hormonal changes and trigger inflammation. Remember, the milk of a mother cow is meant to stimulate rapid growth in a calf. A newborn calf weighs 65-75 lbs. A newborn human weighs around 5-9 lbs.

There are many ways to root out dangerous visceral fat, but all of them require a level of dedication and discipline. Are you ready to do what it takes to not only look better, but feel better on the inside?

See other content

Can a Ketogenic Diet Clear Up Your Acne?

 Though acne is usually seen as a male hormone excess concern called androgen-mediated acne, in many cases it’s actually driven more by insulin, which will also make the other hormonal based acne from thyroid hormones or estrogen issues worse. It

Read More »

Ketogenic Diet and Sports Performance

We are full of fat, as an interesting review article published last year in The European Journal of Sport Sciences points out. The article, “Rethinking Fat as a Fuel for Endurance Exercise,” notes that even the leanest marathon runner has

Read More »

Can the Ketogenic Diet Alter Neurological Disorders?

The ketogenic diet — a low carb, moderate protein, high fat diet — has been used since the 1920s (potentially even back to the biblical ages) to successfully treat epilepsy, especially in those for whom conventional pharmaceutical treatments have been unsuccessful.

Read More »
Metabolic Blueprint Coach Chat