Fat tissue acts as a buffer for metabolic disease and is protective; reducing or eliminating fat cells increases the risk of diabetes. — Whalespan
Fat tissue acts as a buffer for metabolic disease and is protective; reducing or eliminating fat cells increases the risk of diabetes.
⚠ High risk
We can't find evidence that holds up here. Proponents are reasoning from mechanism or analogy rather than direct human data, and the most credible skeptics raise objections we can't dismiss.
✕NOTSUPPORTED
⚠
High-risk intervention — consult a physician before acting.Drug-drug interactions, dose-dependence, and screening contraindications apply.
“so I everybody's like really against fat you know like they're trying to maybe they get liposuction or they try and go for like fat cell apoptosis and all this kind off don't do that because you it's gonna increase your risk of diabetes in 20 years time because that having having that fat is protective that is an Oregon fight isn't organ it's super important so so yet so this seems to start in the fat and then it kind of depends on I think the person but like some people will argue that it starts in the muscle if you're super sedentary yeah that might be the case but what it's essentially the cell saying I do not have the ability or the desire to process the nutrients that you're sending me that's what instant resistance it it's like a suitcase that's full yeah you can't pack anymore t-shirts in there yeah and that's either because the capacity is decreased right because say because there's injury to your mitochondria or and you know that directly feeds back to the instance receptor or your a fat cell and you're just like stuffed full of fat and you just can't take anymore and then you start saying oh no mass no more
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