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While weightlifting improves metabolism and glucose sensitivity, it doesn't significantly reduce dangerous visceral fat. To target this deep belly fat, aerobic exercises like running, jogging, or cycling are necessary due to their higher energy expenditure and impact on caloric deficit.
Focusing solely on an hour-long workout is less effective for metabolic health than integrating consistent movement throughout the day. Regular motion signals cells to continuously absorb glucose for energy. Prolonged sitting negates many benefits of a single exercise session by leaving cells metabolically inactive for hours.
Current exercise guidelines suggest a 2:1 ratio of moderate-to-vigorous exercise based on calorie burn. However, new data shows the ratio is closer to 8:1 for reducing death from cardiovascular disease, highlighting the disproportionate value of intensity.
Perform cardiovascular training after weightlifting. The pre-fatigued state from lifting forces your heart to work harder to meet demand, achieving the conditioning goal even with lower output, and it doesn't compromise the intensity of your primary strength workout.
While you cannot spot-reduce subcutaneous belly fat, you can influence the loss of dangerous visceral fat around organs. Diets lower in saturated fats, specifically from fatty land animal meats, are more conducive to reducing this specific type of abdominal fat.
You don't have to be overweight to have dangerous levels of visceral fat surrounding your organs. These individuals, often called "metabolically unhealthy lean," appear healthy but have biomarkers similar to obese people, posing significant health risks they are unaware of.
The order of workouts matters significantly. Performing strength training before endurance work does not compromise endurance and may even enhance it. However, doing endurance training first fatigues muscles, leading to worse performance and diminished results in the subsequent strength session.
The number one predictor of long-term successful fat loss, according to meta-analyses, is not the type of diet or exercise but the individual's ability to adhere to their chosen program. Focusing on sustainability and enjoyment is more critical than optimizing for a theoretically "perfect" plan.
Research on "The Biggest Loser" contestants revealed that metabolic slowdown is a response to significant calorie restriction and exercise. Counterintuitively, those with the largest metabolic slowdown were the most successful at losing weight and keeping it off.
A major pitfall of intermittent fasting is the loss of lean muscle tissue. To counteract this, it must be combined with dedicated resistance training. This combination allows for the metabolic benefits of fasting while signaling the body to retain and even build muscle, which can be tracked through strength gains.
It's possible to gain dangerous, inflammatory visceral fat without the number on the scale changing. Dr. Patrick cites studies where subjects eating ultra-processed, high-calorie diets for just five days gained visceral and liver fat—but not total body weight—while also developing brain insulin resistance.