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Fat burning is about hormones, not just cutting calories. Understanding the hormones that burn fat versus those that store fat, and how to trigger or avoid them, can make you successful. Doctors may assess hormones and, if they find low testosterone, they may prescribe testosterone. Among fat-burning hormones, insulin is the key one. Insulin is made by the pancreas and it does a lot of things, including helping you store fat. You cannot burn fat if insulin is too high. Even if you boost other fat-burning hormones, if insulin—the fat-making hormone—is elevated, it nullifies all of the other hormones that help you lose weight.

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Insulin resistance prevents weight loss because elevated fasting insulin constantly signals fat cells to store more fat, inhibiting lipolysis. To lose weight, insulin levels must be lowered through diet, exercise, drugs, or surgery, starting with dietary changes. Insulin levels rise primarily due to refined carbohydrates and sugar. While fat doesn't significantly raise insulin, amino acids do, especially leucine. Leucine is found in corn-fed beef, chicken, and fish, which is a reason to avoid ultra-processed foods. A diet with 15-20% protein is acceptable, but the source of amino acids should be considered.

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The biggest fasting mistake is overeating when you resume eating. Fasting aims to switch fuel sources by lowering insulin levels, signaling the body to use stored calories as body fat. Even with a caloric deficit, high insulin prevents accessing body fat calories. The key is to eat normally, not excessively, with healthy, unprocessed foods. Reducing the eating window effectively lowers insulin, allowing normal eating within that window while the body fuels itself from stored fat.

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Sugar, not fat, causes fat accumulation. When sugar is consumed, insulin levels increase. Insulin's primary role is to inhibit other forms of energy use, including fat metabolism. Consequently, fat accumulates in the blood, leading to elevated blood fat levels. Individuals with high sugar intake tend to have elevated triglycerides due to high insulin levels. High insulin levels are generally associated with diets rich in sugar, especially refined sugars.

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Burning fat is about hormones, not just cutting calories. Understanding fat-burning versus fat-storing hormones is key. Insulin, made by the pancreas, is a main hormone that helps you store fat. If insulin levels are too high, you cannot burn fat. Elevated insulin nullifies all other fat-burning hormones, preventing weight loss.

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Insulin resistance occurs when cells resist insulin's attempts to deliver glucose. After eating, glucose is created, and insulin transports it to cells. Overeating causes cells to reject the glucose, but the body continues producing insulin. To avoid diabetes, insulin stores the excess glucose as fat, especially around the belly and organs, elevates triglycerides, and creates a fatty liver. Diabetes occurs when insulin can no longer store the glucose and it ends up in the blood. A standard A1C diabetes test may not detect insulin resistance, as it often appears normal until the condition has progressed for years. A specific insulin resistance test exists. However, if you have poor nutrition, excess belly fat, and elevated cholesterol, you are likely insulin resistant, regardless of a normal A1C result. It is important to take action before it's too late.

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Another factor that's very important is the frequency of eating. If you're snacking, if you're eating between meals, if you're even eating three meals a day, that can slow things down. Because one of the triggers for insulin, the fat storing hormone, is eating in general. So the less you eat, the better. The less you snack, the better. Any food, will stimulate insulin, and then that will make you a little bit more hungry. So we want to get you in a state where you're, burning your own fat and you're satisfied and you're not hungry anymore. So we wanna combine the low carb with eating less frequent, like two meals a day or even one meal a day. That will produce huge effects, and because you're not craving, it'll make it easier to do.

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Low insulin levels allow the body to oxidize more fat. Several factors impact insulin and glucagon, shifting the body toward fat burning. Berberine, derived from a plant, and metformin are increasingly used to lower blood glucose. These compounds effectively reduce blood glucose, which in turn lowers insulin, potentially increasing fat oxidation. Insulin inhibits fat oxidation, the process of converting fatty acids into ATP in the mitochondria. Therefore, maintaining low insulin levels enhances fat oxidation.

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Fasting does not lower metabolic rate; it increases it. When you don't eat, insulin falls, allowing your body to use stored calories. Simultaneously, sympathetic tone, cortisol, and growth hormone levels increase. These hormonal changes activate the body and signal it to start using stored calories.

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Insulin, a hormone made by your pancreas, is essential for life. Your body's main source of energy is glucose, a simple sugar that comes from the food you eat. Insulin is released when glucose enters your bloodstream to help glucose get to the cells found in your muscles, fat, and liver. When you have insulin resistance, those cells don't respond like like they should to insulin. And when that happens, glucose can't efficiently be removed from your bloodstream or stored for later use. If those cells become too resistant to insulin, your blood sugar can become too high, leading to hyperglycemia. And over time, this can lead to prediabetes and type two diabetes.

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When glucose is ingested, it causes a glucose spike in the bloodstream, which insulin lowers. The higher the glucose, the more insulin the pancreas releases. Insulin sequesters glucose to the liver and fat for storage. Insulin's job is to take whatever you're not burning and put it into fat for storage. Insulin is the energy storage hormone. If you're active, glucose will clear into muscle, so blood glucose won't rise as much and the pancreas will put out less insulin. If you didn't exercise, the insulin will take the excess glucose in your blood and store it as fat. This insulin rise is particularly egregious in terms of metabolic disease.

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Excess energy, primarily calories from fats or carbohydrates, is stored in fat cells as triglycerides. This is how your body conserves energy for future use. Over time, this excess energy leads to a fat surplus, which can have an impact on your body shape and health. To lose weight, you must consume fewer calories than you burn. This is known as a calorie deficit. A daily calorie deficit of 500 calories is a good place to start to see discernible fat loss. Though it varies from person to person, fats are released from fat cells and transported to your body's mitochondria, which are the cells energy producing organelles, by maintaining a steady calorie deficit.

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When you fast, your metabolic rate increases, as shown in numerous studies. This is due to basic physiology. When you don't eat, insulin levels fall, allowing your body to use stored calories. Simultaneously, other hormones rise. Your sympathetic tone, or fight-or-flight response, increases, as do cortisol and growth hormone levels. These hormones signal your body to start using calories. Consider a hungry wolf in the wild: it's activated and more dangerous than a well-fed lion. After eating, you become lethargic and want to digest your food, lacking energy. The idea that fasting slows your metabolism is false. In reality, it speeds up.

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When insulin is low, you do place your system in a position to oxidize more fat. There are going to be a number of things that impact insulin and glucagon that are going to shift the body toward more fat burning. And so for instance, berberine, which comes from a plant or metformin are compounds that are now in kind of growing use for reducing blood glucose. They are very potent at reducing blood glucose, which will reduce insulin and thereby can increase fat oxidation. And that's because, as I mentioned before, fat oxidation, this conversion of fatty acids into ATP in the mitochondria is inhibited by insulin. So if you keep insulin low, you're going to increase that process.

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People gain weight because of hormones, not calories. The body doesn't respond to calories, but to hormonal signals. Insulin is the main hormone involved in fatness or weight gain. When you eat, insulin tells the body to store food energy. When you fast, insulin levels fall, signaling the body to release stored energy. Balancing feeding and fasting leads to equilibrium. Constant eating or consuming foods that highly stimulate insulin keeps insulin levels high, instructing the body to store fat.

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Insulin resistance occurs when cells stop accepting glucose delivered by insulin. As we eat, food converts to glucose, which insulin transports to cells. Overeating causes cells to reject the glucose, but the body continues producing insulin. The body then stores the excess glucose as fat, especially around the belly and organs, elevates triglycerides, and creates a fatty liver. Eventually, insulin fails to store the glucose, leading to diabetes. A standard A1C diabetes test may not detect insulin resistance, as it only becomes abnormal after years of resistance. A specific insulin resistance test exists, but if you have poor nutrition, belly fat, and elevated cholesterol, you are likely insulin resistant, even with a normal A1C. It is important to take action before the A1C shifts and diabetes develops.

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Obesity is characterized by fat around the brain, neck, and heart, potentially causing sleep apnea, as well as marbled muscle mass. Visceral fat and energy problems can occur in both obese and relatively skinny individuals. A person who is 100 pounds overweight carries an extra 350,000 calories, while someone ten pounds overweight carries 35,000, but both may experience fatigue, hunger, cravings, and mental fog due to hijacked hormones. Both may have hyperinsulinemia, preventing fat burning. The location of fat storage differs, but the root cause is the same. Lowering insulin levels allows the body to burn stored fat, improving energy levels and reducing hunger. The food industry focuses on calories, but controlling blood sugar and insulin is key. A meal that doesn't spike blood sugar leads to less insulin production, putting the body in burning mode and promoting satiety, which reduces cravings and allows the body to burn stored fat.

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Insulin levels may remain high regardless of diet, which defines insulin resistance. Fasting is likely the most effective method to lower insulin because it's impossible to consume fewer than zero calories. Therefore, fasting is the most effective dietary approach for reducing insulin. While exercise plays a role, fasting is the most effective dietary method to lower insulin levels.

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Can fiber lower our blood sugar levels? Well, let's come and take a look. So when we eat carbohydrates that don't have a lot of fiber, so I'm talking fruit juices, refined carbohydrates, that's really going to spike our insulin levels, like our blood glucose levels. And guess what? We go into fat storage mode. So we do not and cannot burn off that fat when our insulin levels are high. And this will mess up our leptin levels as well. Now ideally what we want to do and what fiber helps us to do is helps to keep our blood sugar stable, meaning that we can burn that fat off because we have that nice even steady road of our blood glucose levels and our insulin levels. Follow for more natural health tips.

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When insulin is low, you do place your system in a position to oxidize more fat. There are going to be a number of things that impact insulin and glucagon that are going to shift the body toward more fat burning. berberine, which comes from a plant or metformin are compounds that are now in kind of growing use for reducing blood glucose. They are very potent at reducing blood glucose, which will reduce insulin and thereby can increase fat oxidation. And that's because, as I mentioned before, fat oxidation is conversion of fatty acids into ATP in the mitochondria is inhibited by insulin. So if you keep insulin low, you're going to increase that process.

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Whenever we eat anything, it will turn to glucose in our blood. This glucose in our blood gives us energy. In order for our body to access the energy from this glucose, our body releases insulin. This insulin is the key to our cells. It allows the glucose to enter our muscles and our organs to be used for energy and help them work. The more we eat, the more glucose is released and the more insulin is required to get that into our muscles and our organs, which allows our body to function. If we run out of room in our organs and our muscles, but we still have all this glucose in our bloodstream, where does it go? It goes into our liver to be stored for later. All of this extra glucose gets stored as fat.

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And the reason that a fat cell can grow and shrink is fat cells absorb what are called triglycerides. Triglycerides are formed from a multitude of different things, but generally speaking, let's just say it's just food in general. It's usually carbohydrates, but we'll just say it's food in general. When you consume food, and you're consuming food every two or three hours like a lot of the fitness industry wants us to do, or like we've heard is healthy, what happens is insulin allows these fat cells to get larger. It allows triglycerides to be absorbed by the fat cell, allowing them to expand. So basically what we have to remember is fat cells don't fully burn, they shrink and they expand, and they swell up when they have triglycerides that get absorbed in

Genius Life

The SHOCKING SCIENCE On Preventing Disease, Diabetes & LOSING WEIGHT! | Ben Bikman
Guests: Ben Bikman
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Three macronutrient-based rules govern carbohydrate intake: avoid processed carbs, prioritize whole fruits and vegetables, and focus on protein and fat. Insulin resistance is the foundation of type 2 diabetes, which can be reversed through dietary changes rather than medication. A study showed that 11 women with diagnosed type 2 diabetes reversed their condition in 90 days through a dietary intervention aimed at lowering insulin without medication. To reduce insulin levels, fasting is the most effective method, as it allows insulin to drop quickly. When eating, focus on fats and proteins to keep insulin low. The conventional dietary paradigm, which emphasizes carbohydrates, is flawed; humans do not need essential carbohydrates. Instead, prioritize nutrient-dense animal proteins and healthy fats. Insulin resistance develops when fat cells become hypertrophic, leading to the release of free fatty acids and pro-inflammatory molecules that disrupt insulin signaling. To combat this, a low-insulin approach—controlling carbohydrates and prioritizing protein and fat—is recommended. Meal timing is also crucial; eating earlier in the day is more beneficial for metabolic health.

The Dhru Purohit Show

5 Effective Ways To Burn Fat & Lose Weight For Longevity In 2024 | Ben Bikman
Guests: Rangan Chatterjee, Ben Bikman, Shawn Stevenson
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Dhru Purohit hosts a discussion with Rangan Chatterjee, Ben Bikman, and Shawn Stevenson on sustainable weight loss and health improvement strategies that move beyond traditional calorie-centric paradigms. Rangan emphasizes that sustainable weight loss can be achieved without drastic dietary changes by focusing on factors such as hunger, eating environment, and timing. He critiques the long-standing belief that weight loss is solely about caloric deficit, arguing that this approach often leads to yo-yo dieting due to constant hunger and deprivation. He introduces the importance of insulin in weight management, explaining that fat cells cannot grow without elevated insulin levels and cannot shrink unless insulin is low. Rangan advocates for prioritizing the endocrine component, particularly insulin management, over calorie counting, which can be tedious and frustrating. He explains that insulin is produced by the pancreas and plays a crucial role in lowering blood glucose levels after carbohydrate consumption. However, chronic high insulin levels can lead to insulin resistance, a condition affecting a significant portion of the population, particularly in Western countries. The conversation also touches on the relationship between insulin resistance and various health issues, including erectile dysfunction, hypertension, and neurological disorders like migraines and Alzheimer's disease. Rangan highlights that insulin resistance can stem from dietary choices and stress, emphasizing the need for a holistic approach to health that includes emotional well-being and stress management. The discussion further explores the role of the microbiome in metabolism and weight regulation, noting that gut diversity is linked to obesity. Rangan shares insights from studies showing that specific gut bacteria can influence calorie absorption and body composition. He stresses the importance of a diverse diet rich in whole foods to support gut health. The hosts also discuss the psychological aspects of eating, emphasizing that emotional factors often drive unhealthy eating behaviors. Rangan introduces the "three F's" exercise to help individuals understand their feelings around food and find non-food alternatives to address emotional needs. Finally, the conversation underscores the interconnectedness of food, health, and relationships, highlighting how nutritional deficiencies can impact emotional stability and interpersonal dynamics. The hosts call for a shift in focus from mere calorie counting to a more nuanced understanding of health that incorporates emotional, psychological, and physiological factors.

No Lab Coat Required

Could THIS be what's stopping us from losing weight?
reSee.it Podcast Summary
America is getting fatter, and while diet debates dominate, this stream emphasizes root mechanisms. Sleep deprivation is presented as a major driver, tied to circadian rhythm and hormones that decide whether energy is stored or burned. The speaker describes the endocrine system as glands that secrete hormones to regulate metabolism, with receptive tissues adjusting energy use in real time. He contrasts the two autonomic branches—parasympathetic 'rest and digest' and sympathetic 'fight or flight'—and stresses that balance is a continual readjustment, not a fixed state. Insulin anchors the fat story. 'Insulin is the chief executive of storing fat. Insulin is the fat storing hormone.' It regulates blood glucose, but its action includes storing energy as glycogen. The hunger hormones ghrelin and leptin figure into appetite control; leptin is triggered by distension of the GI tract as food fills the stomach. The 'dial' model is introduced: nothing in the body is simply on or off; processes run along a continuum with amplifications and inhibitions. Insulin resistance is explained with a dull knife analogy: tissues stop listening, so more insulin is needed, risking hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia. Sleep timing and circadian alignment are central. Circadian rhythm is the 24-hour cycle guiding hormone release; the sun’s cycle is the master signal. The talk highlights 'money time sleep'—the deep sleep window around 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.—as a key recovery period. Slow wave sleep is described as playing the most important role in metabolic, hormonal, and neurophysiological changes. Disruptions to timing—late-night light, screens, shift work—throw leptin, ghrelin, and insulin off balance, increasing appetite and promoting weight gain. Evidence is presented. An interventional study shows partial sleep restriction for a single night reduces insulin sensitivity by 19 to 25% for hepatic and peripheral glucose metabolism. Observational meta-analysis across nine studies finds short sleep (often five hours or less) raises relative risk of type 2 diabetes; for example one sample shows 1.19 times the risk, another reports up to 180% increase in some comparisons, and seven hours or less yields mixed results. Averaging across studies, short sleep is linked to about a 28% increased risk of type 2 diabetes versus eight hours. Practical takeaways emphasize sleep hygiene: remove phones from the bed, keep the room dark and cool, and limit blue light exposure; blue light blocking glasses are discussed as partially effective and partly a cash grab. The sun remains the reliable regulator; timing aligned with the sun sustains hormonal balance. Chronotypes and sleep quality versus duration are acknowledged. The narrator urges practical steps to improve sleep and notes that improving sleep timing can support metabolic homeostasis and potentially aid weight management, without becoming obsessively anxious about every moment of sleep.
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