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The Secret Life of Fat: The Science Behind the Body's Least Understood Organ and What It Means for You

Tekijä: Sylvia Tara

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioMaininnat
1072254,818 (3.85)2
Blends historical perspectives with cutting-edge research to examine body fat as a critical endocrine organ that can be better understood and managed when recognized as a necessary component of human health. Biochemist Sylvia Tara explores the surprising science behind our most hated body part. Fat is an obsession, a dirty word, a subject of national handwringingand, according to biochemist Sylvia Tara, the least-understood part of our body. You may not love your fat, but your body certainly does. In fact, your body is actually endowed with many self-defense measures to hold on to fat. For example, fat can use stem cells to regenerate; increase our appetite if it feels threatened; and use bacteria, genetics, and viruses to expand itself. The secret to losing twenty pounds? You have to work with your fat, not against it. Tara explains how your fat influences your appetite and willpower, how it defends itself when attacked, and why it grows back so quickly. The Secret Life of Fat brings cutting-edge research together with historical perspectives to reveal fat's true identity: an endocrine organ that, in the right amount, is critical to our health. Fat triggers puberty, enables our reproductive and immune systems, and even affects brain size. Although we spend $60 billion annually fighting fat, our efforts are often misinformed and misdirected. Tara expertly illustrates the complex role that genetics, hormones, diet, exercise, and history play in our weight, and The Secret Life of Fat sets you on the path to beat the bulge once and for all.--Dust jacket.… (lisätietoja)
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The book contains lots of science about fat with stories about people that make it very interesting to read. It is easily understood with special terms defined and explained. I found it an engaging read, even a sort of page-turner. We learn a lot about types of body fat, what fat does for us, and how fat tends to protect itself. With the science in mind we get ideas of how we might make our own plan for dealing with excess fat. The book shows us how this can be a monumental task leading to a better understanding of the problem much as we have learned to look at the problem of diabetes. We may be able to look at ourselves and others who are overweight less negatively as a result of reading this book and understanding more about what actually can lead to the condition.

The book gives a lot of information. It does not offer us a diet plan. The author does share specifically what she does, but tells us that we are all different in what we need. We can take the information and use what meets our own needs. ( )
  ajlewis2 | Jul 11, 2018 |
The title couldn’t be more perfect. Fat is a universe unto itself, and we are only now discovering how it runs our bodies. The book is as dramatic as the title, and the chapters are filled with case studies of individuals and research findings, and both from all over the world. It is also very personal, inspired by Tara’s own combat with fat. Informed by her own findings, she beats her fat at its own game.

Tara has a lovely description of fat: glucose is like cash, glycogen (chains of glucose) like a checking account, and fat is a certificate of deposit. There are three kinds of fat – white, beige and brown. White is the classic, energy store. Beige waits for signals to change to brown, which is saturated with mitochondria and burns energy instead of storing it. This, for obvious reasons, has become an obsession for research.

-Like any other organ, fat will fight for life. Constant diet changing, losing and regaining a few pounds, only makes it tougher. It has the communication and receptor tools to keep itself in control. It manipulates the brain and participates in brain signals.
-Fat signals the body for angiogenesis – it orders up new veins and arteries to approach it, in order to feed it, just like a tumor.
-Fat knows when there is too much of it and signals the body to manufacture cytokines – inflammatories – the usual first line of defense.
-Fat is an endocrine organ – it produces hormones (leptin) that latch onto the brain’s hypothalamus and tell it to be hungry – or not.
-By reducing leptin levels, remaining fat makes people feel hungrier than they were before reducing.
-Fat circulates adiponectin which helps clear the blood - of fat. Those with high levels can be very fat and perfectly healthy. Hard exercise increases levels.
-More than 50% of cells in the fat of the obese are immune cells, vs 5% in the fat of the normal or thin.
-Fat resurges by lowering energy levels, so dieters have to work harder than normal to keep weight off. Only consistent, hard exercise overcomes the return of fat - even following liposuction.
-Half a pound of fat can contain 50 million stem cells, used to rebuild muscle, bone and organs throughout the body. Doctors are quickly learning to repurpose them.

-Hard exercise overcomes genetic predispositions to fat and weight in most cases.

Chapter 8 is all about how women’s bodies deal differently with fat. Their fat is a better kind (subcutaneous vs visceral), but there is more of it, and it takes them disproportionately more effort in the gym and less at the table to achieve the goals men see more easily.

There is a fascinating analysis of sumo wrestlers, those hugely fat men whose sole job in life is to push other obese opponents out of the ring. The surprise is their blood levels are excellent, and they are extraordinarily healthy – as long as they keep to the training regimen and diet. Once they retire, they quickly slide into fat hell.

Oddly, the chapter I was expecting – how do people with no fat and extreme, reduced calorie diets – fare – is missing. In animal studies, such diets extend lifespans and energy levels dramatically. So is fat really necessary, or are we better off without it altogether? No mention in The Secret Life of Fat.

Tara’s book is a lovely combination of the emotional and the scientific, the personal and the universal, narrative and science. It is lean and muscled and terrifically readable.

David Wineberg ( )
  DavidWineberg | Aug 13, 2016 |
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We spend billions in the war against fat—chemical weapons, surgical devices, behavior restructuring, exercise contraptions, and rationed food programs—but despite our best efforts, fat returns.
Clearly, we do not understand the enemy we're fighting.
And maybe as we start to understand our "enemy" we'll realize that it is not all bad. New research is showing us that fat secretes essential hormones, enables many bodily functions, keeps us safe from disease, and may even help us live longer. Fat appears to be so important that our stem cells are capable of creating it independent of our food intact—a function that has been observed for critical tissues such as muscle, bone, and brain.
But thousands of research studies from around the world are now revealing that fat is not just fat—it is a dynamic and interactive endocrine organ that has life-or-death influence over us.  It is so important that nature ensures we have it beginning in the womb. At about fourteen weeks of gestation, the embryo starts to manufacture fat, even before all systems are functioning. As later chapters describe, fat controls our appetite, influences our emotions, supplies energy, and enables the activities of other body parts.
Fat cells (also called adipocytes) could expand their volume more than one thousand times normal size by pushing other cell contents off to the side.
Shapiro and Wertheimer had discovered that fat possessed the power to produce itself.
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Englanninkielinen Wikipedia

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Blends historical perspectives with cutting-edge research to examine body fat as a critical endocrine organ that can be better understood and managed when recognized as a necessary component of human health. Biochemist Sylvia Tara explores the surprising science behind our most hated body part. Fat is an obsession, a dirty word, a subject of national handwringingand, according to biochemist Sylvia Tara, the least-understood part of our body. You may not love your fat, but your body certainly does. In fact, your body is actually endowed with many self-defense measures to hold on to fat. For example, fat can use stem cells to regenerate; increase our appetite if it feels threatened; and use bacteria, genetics, and viruses to expand itself. The secret to losing twenty pounds? You have to work with your fat, not against it. Tara explains how your fat influences your appetite and willpower, how it defends itself when attacked, and why it grows back so quickly. The Secret Life of Fat brings cutting-edge research together with historical perspectives to reveal fat's true identity: an endocrine organ that, in the right amount, is critical to our health. Fat triggers puberty, enables our reproductive and immune systems, and even affects brain size. Although we spend $60 billion annually fighting fat, our efforts are often misinformed and misdirected. Tara expertly illustrates the complex role that genetics, hormones, diet, exercise, and history play in our weight, and The Secret Life of Fat sets you on the path to beat the bulge once and for all.--Dust jacket.

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