Disclaimer: Discussion of pharmaceutical
agents below is presented for information only.
Nothing here is meant to take the place of advice
from a licensed health care practitioner. Consult
a physician before taking any medication.
Understanding the Problems
The class of receptors, once activated,
will make the fat cell shrink. The other
class of receptors when activated will make
the fat cell bigger and prevent it from
shrinking. This is the balance between the
good and the bad receptors which will
determine how fat you are. Furthermore,
those good and bad receptors are not equally
spread on each fat cells. Some cells contain
more good receptors and so are easily shrunk
by a diet. But many fat cells contain more
bad than good receptors. This is why some
fat deposits are very hard to lose. Which
means you will never get lean in those areas
unless you reduce the number of the bad
"Dirty" receptors.
Alpha-2 Receptors: The Enemy
You have heard of them before. Their exact
name is alpha-2 receptors for
simplification. They are not the first line
of defense for our fat cells. The first line
of defense among the bad receptors are
insulin receptors. But once you go on a low
calorie diet, especially Dan Duchaine's BodyOpus diet,
your insulin level will go down. There will
not be enough of that hormone to prevent fat
cells from shrinking. Once the body realizes
its first line of defense is out of order it
calls upon the second line of defense: it
increases the responsiveness of each alpha-2
receptor. From a dieter's point of view,
this means he will then be unable to lose
fat where a high density of alpha-2
receptors can be found.
Alpha-2 Receptor Densities
It is easy to figure out where the alpha-2
receptors are the most dense just by looking
at someone. This is exactly where their fat
accumulates. You see, alpha-2 receptors not
only prevent fat loss but they also promote
fat gains. They are like magnets, attracting
and retaining fat. Alpha-2 receptors are
found in very high densities below the skin
(subcutaneously). We can distinguish two
main patterns of alpha-2 distributions:
- In most women and in some men with
a female type body fat distribution, alpha-2
receptors are found in high density mostly
on the subcutaneous fat of the butt and of
the legs.
- In most men and in some women
(those neither showing a specific lower body
fat accumulation), most of the alpha-2
receptors are located equally all over the
subcutaneous fat of the body.
Subcutaneous vs Intramuscular Fat
The subcutaneous fat is the fat located
between the skin and the muscles. This is
the fat that if carried in excess will make
you look fat in a mirror. Intramuscular fat
on the other hand is the fat that we find
inside the muscles. You can have plenty of
intramuscular fat and not look fat. In fact,
if one only carries intramuscular fat with
virtually no subcutaneous fat, he will look
big and lean even though he really is fat.
In reality, most people will carry more
subcutaneous fat than intramuscular fat.
This is bad enough, but as you go on a diet,
things turn ugly. As we said above, the
subcutaneous fat contains the most alpha-2
receptors (around twice as much) when
compared to intramuscular fat. So when you
go on a diet, you will lose intramuscular
fat twice as easily as subcutaneous fat. In
front of a mirror, this is a catastrophe: by
losing intramuscular fat, your muscles will
appear smaller. But since little
subcutaneous fat will be lost, you will not
look much leaner. In fact, you will only see
a smaller (but not leaner) version of
yourself. All this because of those extra
alpha-2 receptors.
To sum it up; people with much of their
bodyfat as subcutaneous fat will lost fat
but in the wrong place and so will not
appear leaner where they want to. Alpha-2
adrenoceptors are the main culprit. Before
being able to combat those receptors, we
first have to understand which factors
increase alpha-2 numbers on our fat cells.
When the Betas Control the Alphas
We have said above that there were two big
classes of receptors on fat cells; the good
ones and the bad ones. So far we have talked
of the bad ones. The good ones are called
beta receptors. Like alpha-2 receptors, they
are found on the fat cells. When activated,
these beta receptors will try to shrink the
fat cells. But they will only succeed if the
alpha-2 receptors are not found in too high
quantity in those cells. You see, alpha-2
receptors have exactly the opposite effects
of beta receptors. As both are activated by
the same hormones (adrenaline and
noradrenaline), if a higher quantity of
alpha-2 receptors are found, beta receptor
effects will be overwhelmed and no fat loss
will occur in those receptors. Beta
receptors will only induce fat loss on fat
cells with low alpha-2 density. That is the
area where it is easy to lose fat while on a
diet (mostly intramuscular fat).
As if things were not bad enough, each
time beta receptors are activated, two
signals are sent to the fat cells:
- To either increase the number of
alpha-2 receptors or their responsiveness or
both.
- To either decrease the number of
beta receptors or their responsiveness or
both.
This means that within a few days you will
have a stronger alpha-2 response to the
hormones which are supposed to make you
leaner (remember adrenaline and
noradrenaline) and a weaker beta response.
That is bad, really bad. You now understand
why will have to get dirty!
Playing Russian Roulette With
Low-Calories Diets and Alpha-2 Receptors
A second factor which controls alpha-2
receptors on fat cells is the diet itself.
As your calorie intake goes down, so will
the level of insulin in your blood. As we
said above this will increase the
responsiveness of each alpha-2 receptor in
the short run. This is bad but not terribly
bad as it will also increase both the number
and the responsiveness of the good receptors
(beta receptors). But after a few days of
dieting, most people will get lucky. The
number of alpha-2 receptors will decrease a
little. Some people will be unlucky though,
as either their number of alpha-2 receptors
will go up or the responsiveness of each
alpha-2 receptor will increase. Even worse,
in some people both the number and the
responsiveness of the alpha receptors will
increase. We all know who they are; those
who cannot lose ft no matter what (that is
until now). So the impact of dieting on
alpha-2 receptors looks more like Russian
Roulette than a science. And even on the
luckiest, the favorable effects of diets on
alpha-2 receptors will be mild.
Exercise and Alpha-2 Receptors
Exercise does not seem to help
get rid of
alpha-2 receptors. In fact, if exercise has
an impact on alpha-2 receptors on fat cells
it would tend to be an up-regulation. But
most studies show no impact at all. This has
a direct consequence especially for women
(but this also applies to men). We said that
the major reason why women have a hard time
losing fat on the butt is because the
density of alpha-2 receptors on that body
part is too high. Furthermore, we just saw
that exercise will not help to down-regulate
alpha-2 receptors.
Conclusion
Don't waste your time doing endless
repetition with a light weight on butt
blaster or doing high rep lunges. This might
burn off a few calories but it will not
solve the problem. This is also true for men
doing endless repetitions of sit ups for
abdominals to fight subcutaneous fat on the
stomach. I know this will not prevent you
from doing it but at least now you
understand why you get nothing out of it!
Originally published in Dan Duchaine's
Dirty Dieting Newsletter