How slim doesn't always mean healthy

July 11, 2010 07:35 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:20 pm IST - Melbourne

Using MRI body scanners doctors demonstrated that even super-slim people could have high levels of internal fat.

Using MRI body scanners doctors demonstrated that even super-slim people could have high levels of internal fat.

You may be slim and still have dangerously high levels of fat within you, according to the British Medical Research Council.

Using MRI body scanners doctors demonstrated that even super-slim people could have high levels of internal fat collecting around the heart, liver, kidneys and pancreas. These people, dubbed “skinny-fats”, could be seriously putting their health at risk.

“The fat we can see on overweight people is subcutaneous fat,” The Daily Telegraph quoted Dr. Ron McCoy, Melbourne-based spokesperson for the Royal College of Australian GPs, as saying. However, what could be more dangerous is visceral fat or the fat we can’t see but which surrounds vital organs.

Dr. McCoy said: “Visceral fat is metabolised by the liver, which transforms it into cholesterol. Cholesterol circulates in the blood and can collect in your arteries, creating heart disease and high blood pressure.” Visceral fat is also believed to produces more hormones and proteins than subcutaneous fat, affecting glucose levels and leading to the onset of type 2 diabetes and other health problems like cardiovascular disease. But the question is, if one is thin then how does fat accumulate inside the body.

Lack of physical exercise is the biggest reason.

Sam Mower, an exercise physiologist, said, “If your body isn’t moving, it doesn’t metabolise the fat that’s building up - either outside or inside.” Diet is another factor. “If you’re eating foods high in saturated fat, such as butter, cheese, cakes and biscuits, it’s nearly all stored as visceral fat,” Mower said. The menopause and sugar intake by way of alcohol consumption are among other causes.

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