This Brown Adipose Fat Burns Away Calories Faster
Written by Kirsten Whittaker on September 6th, 2009Fat comes in two distinct colors - white which offers insulation and stores energy, and brown adipose fat which burns energy to produce heat?
Brown fat (as much as 5% of their body weight) helps keep new-borns warm, but no one knew how much adults retain, or how active it might be.
Some thought adults had none of this "good fat; others were convinced that it had no connection to extra weight or obesity. The latest research in this area changes all that.
Studies have been going on for decades looking at brown fat (known to science as brown adipose tissue) in the hope of finding ways to unlock its secrets.
Now a trio of reports appearing in the April 9, 2009 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) confirm finding brown fat in adults, and that it can be detected by exposing subjects to cold temperatures.
Most of us have small deposits of this fat around our collarbones and in the neck area, with women having two times as much (estimated to be about a half ounce) on average, then men do.
In some cases, those who had more active areas of brown fat were not as heavy leaving experts to wonder at the working of this type of fat.
"Fifty grams of maximally activated brown fat accounts for 20 percent of your resting energy expenditure", explains Dr. Aaron Cypress of the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, who led one of the studies. "If you add that up, that's 400 or 500 calories per day. So maybe a little of this good fat could go a long way."
In a second study, Finnish researcher Dr. Kirsi Virtanen of the University of Turku and colleagues used positron emission tomography (PET) scans to locate active brown fat deposits in healthy volunteers.
The brown fat became more active when the participants were put in a cold room for several hours. The researchers found that this fat, unlike the white kind, burns calories quicker in colder temperatures.
In this study, the metabolism was on average 15 times faster than in the areas of white fat cells.
So, could this brown fat play a role in metabolism also?
Another work, also in the same issue of the NEJM, carried out by a team at Maastricht University Medical Center discovered that obese men had less brown fat than subjects who were leaner.
They also discovered that as people age they have less brown, and spending even a small amount of time in a chilly place can activate it.
These studies confirm adults certainly do have functional brown fat in our bodies. Though no one knows what role brown fat might play in weight loss in the future.
Maybe research will uncover a way to help the body produce more brown fat; or just activate the potentially good fat cells we have now. Perhaps a drug could target some parts of brown fats metabolic mechanisms, perhaps a procedure could remove the brown fat, amplify it somehow and return it to the body.
Cypress believes that activating the brown fat is key, though whether this would make people lose weight has yet to be tested.
Who knows if turning on this type of fat might just not make the body want to eat more?
If you'd like to try and activate your own stores of brown adipose tissue, turn down the thermostat, or spend more time outdoors in a cooler climate.
Temperatures of 61 degrees were used on the participants, and they might be enough to have your own heat creating, fat burning engine running in no time.
Next - just head on over to the Daily Health Bulletin for more information on how brown adipose tissue burns calories, plus for a limited time get 5 free fantastic health reports. Click here for an automated video of the brown adipose tissue studies.
Tags: adipose fat, brown adipose tissue, brown fat, calories, faster motabolism, fat, Health, Lose Weight, Weight Loss
