Hips, Abs, and Thighs Print E-mail
by Charles Stuart Platkin   
Tuesday, 06 November 2007

Do you ever wonder if it's actually possible to alter those "problem" areas (e.g., large thighs or buttocks) that you can't seem to get rid of, no matter how hard you think you're trying?

Fortunately or unfortunately, much of your "body type" is genetic. But the question remains: Is it possible to overcome this genetic predisposition and change your body shape? Well, I have good and bad news. Yes, these areas can be changed or reduced, but it isn't easy.

Understanding Fat
There are two types of fat: subcutaneous and intraabdominal. Subcutaneous fat is below the skin, and intraabdominal fat (the traditional "apple" shape) is behind the stomach muscles and around the organs. Most women store their fat subcutaneously, in their breasts, hips, buttocks, and thighs (the traditional "pear" shape), while most men store theirs in the abdomen, lower back, chest, and the nape of the neck. 

Intraabdominal fat is considered the most dangerous. "All of the potential health risks, including diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease -- are related to the intraabdominal fat," says David Heber, M.D., Ph.D., professor of medicine and director of the UCLA Center for Human Nutrition and author of The L.A. Shape Diet. 
 
Can You Get the Perfect Body?
"Theoretically, you can get rid of every 'pocket' of fat if you want to become obsessive and take it to the extreme. Just take a look at competitive body builders -- they get very lean compared to your average person, but they're working at it like a job," says Ed McNeely, Msc., an exercise physiologist at Sports Medicine Specialists in Toronto, Canada, who has worked with more than 30 Olympic medalists.

You need to keep things in perspective. "For instance, if you have a wide pelvis, that's not going away," says McNeely. He adds that even Olympic athletes have pockets of fat they can't lose, and they're training for thousands of hours each year.  

Dr. Heber is even less optimistic. "There is fat you can change and fat you can't." His point is that it's hard to overcome genetics. "It requires tremendous discipline, and even then, you're not going to move mountains," agrees Byron Hoogwerf, M.D., an endocrinologist at The Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. 

Losing It
The problem is that most people try to get rid of these fat deposits by restricting calories and increasing the duration of their aerobic exercise. "This is exactly what not to do," says Dan Benardot, Ph.D., R.D., L.D., researcher at the Laboratory for Elite Athlete Performance at Georgia State University in Atlanta. If you start to significantly decrease your calories, whether they're made up of carbs, protein or fat, your body will start to protect itself and go into "starvation" mode.

Unfortunately, this is what most popular diets accomplish. "Your body is very efficient, and when you start to restrict calories and increase your energy expenditure [exercise], it will attempt to conserve fuel, creating more stored fat," says Benardot. And where does it store it? Precisely where you don't want it -- in your hips, abs, thighs, or buttocks. "These 'pockets' of fat are always the first to be filled up and the last to leave," says Heber.

So, if you try to "starve" those pockets away, you'll end up losing weight in areas that you don't necessarily want to, and the problem areas will remain problems.

Not only that, but when you go on any quick-fix diet and restrict calories or carbs, "you start to lose lean muscle tissue, which is the opposite of what you want," says Gary Granata, Ph.D., R.D., director of the Applied Physiology Laboratory at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans, Louisiana.  

Combine It
There's still hope. In order to get your body in the best possible shape, experts recommend a combination of weight training, eating balanced meals (without severe caloric restriction), and increasing aerobic intensity, but not necessarily duration.

Weight training helps to preserve your muscle tissue, speed up your metabolic rate (so you burn more calories while at rest), and increase the size of your muscles. Although you can't "spot" train (exercise one spot on your body and have the fat melt away), you can increase the size of the muscle under the fat, which will make the fat appear leaner.

Most people don't wait long enough to see the results; they're scared off by the increase in muscle mass (and the larger size of the very body part they're trying to reduce). "We tend to panic and stop training when our muscles start to grow under the fat -- that's a mistake. You need stick with your entire program -- which has to include diet, cardio, and strength training -- for at least four months in order to see real change," recommends McNeely. 

In terms of diet, Benardot and Granata recommend fueling your body by eating smaller meals throughout the day, not one or two large meals, even if the calories are the same.

In addition, Benardot recommends increasing the intensity of your aerobic exercise, not the duration. He also warns, "Never exercise while hungry -- you need to feed the exercise."  

And finally, when asked if there is a specific exercise, food, or supplement for each body type, all experts agreed -- any such claim is nothing more than a marketing gimmick.

 _____________________________________

CHARLES STUART PLATKIN is a nutrition and public health advocate, founder of DietDetective.com, the health and fitness network and author of The Diet Detective's Calorie Bargain Bible (Simon & Schuster, 2007). Copyright 2007 by Charles Stuart Platkin. All rights reserved. Sign up for the free Diet Detective newsletter and iTunes podcast at www.DietDetective.com.

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Comments (5)Add Comment
student
written by kc, May 01, 2008
i need to loose weight fast im not fat fat but im so unhapy with my figure :(
...
written by Diane I.Y., February 03, 2008
Very good advice. I definitely don't want to make my problem areas bigger! I am going to step up my intensity!!
...
written by love handles, January 18, 2008
this is very helpful thx
...
written by ELise, November 09, 2007
Wow this is really good information. I never knew even holding back calories would cause your body to go into those "modes" that I tried to stay away from. I definitely would love a models stomach and I am going to adjust my eating habits along with the intensity of my work outs.
...
written by Tamika, November 06, 2007
Excellent advice! I can't wait to try this! Thank you :)

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 06 November 2007 )
 
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