{"id":1045,"date":"2009-04-08T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2009-04-08T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/weight-loss-brown-fat-discovery-may-lead-to-new-treatments-for-obesity\/"},"modified":"2009-04-08T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2009-04-08T00:00:00","slug":"weight-loss-brown-fat-discovery-may-lead-to-new-treatments-for-obesity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/weight-loss-brown-fat-discovery-may-lead-to-new-treatments-for-obesity\/","title":{"rendered":"Discovery of Cold-Activated Brown Fat May Lead to New Obesity Treatments"},"content":{"rendered":"
Getty Images<\/p>\n
By Anne Harding Brown adipose tissue (called brown fat) helps babies, young children, and other small mammals stay warm by burning calories when activated by low temperatures. Scientists have been skeptical that adults retain significant amounts of brown fat on their bodies. But the new research shows that many of us—perhaps even most—do.<\/p>\n “The incredible excitement about this is that we have an entirely new way to try to go after obesity,” says Aaron Cypess, MD, of the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, lead author of one of the new studies. Every obesity drug now on the market aims at getting people to take in fewer calories, Dr. Cypess points out. The current findings, while very preliminary, suggest that drugs could be developed that fire up brown fat activity and help people burn calories faster.<\/p>\n The new research is important because it confirms that adults have brown fat involved in temperature regulation, while also probably playing a role in whether a person is lean or overweight, says Jan Nedergaard, PhD, a professor at the Wenner-Gren Institute at the University of Stockholm in Sweden who has been studying brown fat for 30 years but was not involved in the current research.<\/p>\n “Brown fat can be a very significant player in the game of how we react to the food we eat and whether we store it or burn it away,” Dr. Nedergaard says.<\/p>\n While scientists have known about brown fat and what it does for decades, it’s been nearly impossible to study it in live humans until very recently. Finding it in people’s bodies meant taking tissue samples, so scientists mostly stuck to studying it in lab animals.<\/p>\n This changed when nuclear medicine specialists observed that some people had deposits of tissue that looked like fat but didn’t act like it; this fat-like tissue was located above the collarbones and in the upper chest and consumed lots of energy. Conversely, white adipose tissue—the regular fat that stores extra calories and makes us gain weight—shows very little metabolic activity.<\/p>\n
WEDNESDAY, April 8, 2009 (Health.com) — What if you had a special kind of fat in your body that burned calories instead of storing them—and it could be activated simply by spending time in the cold? According to three preliminary studies published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine<\/em>, you probably do.<\/p>\n