Cold Weather Burns Fat!!!
What do low temps and hot peppers have in common? They both could help burn fat, a new study shows.
Exposure to cold and consumption of chemicals found in chili peppers
both appear to increase the number and activity of brown fat cells,
which burn energy, rather than store it as typical white fat cells do,
said Takeshi Yoneshiro, a researcher at Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine in Japan.
The study is the first to show that brown fat activity can be induced
in people who appeared to have very few or no brown fat cells, said Dr.
Clifford Rosen, a professor of medicine at Tufts University who wasn't
involved in the study.
Participants in the study who were
exposed to cold also had less "bad" white fat at the end of the
experiments, Rosen told Live Science.
In the new study,
researchers exposed eight people with little or no brown fat cells to
moderately low temperatures of 63 degrees Fahrenheit (17 degrees
Celsius) for two hours daily, over the course of six weeks. Compared
with the control subjects, who went about their normal lives, the
cold-exposed people had about 5 percent less body fat at the end of the
study, and also burned more energy when exposed to cold, according to
the study, which was published in August in the Journal of Clinical
Investigation.
The researchers also looked at people who ate
capsinoids, the active ingredient in chili peppers, for six weeks, and
found they also burned more energy than the control group when exposed
to cold, but didn't lose any more white fat than the control group.
Yoneshiro said the experiment might not have continued for long enough
to see white-fat-burning effects of the compounds. A previous study that
lasted 12 weeks found the capsinoid ingestion led to significant body
fat decreases in mildly obese people.
The new results help
explain the results from a recent study co-authored by Snitker, which
found that people who ate capsinoids had increased levels of fat
breakdown, and smaller waists after a six-week period, compared with
people who took placebos.
The brown and the beige
It
was once thought that brown fat, also known as brown adipose tissue
(BAT), was present only in babies. But three research groups
independently discovered in 2009 that brown fat exists in adults,
concentrated in the upper chest and neck of some adults, Rosen said. It
appears reddish-brown because it contains many mitochondria, cellular
factories that release energy, Rosen said.
In 2012, scientists
found yet another type of BAT called "beige fat," which is a subset of
brown fat but is formed from white fat cells. Rosen said that the "brown
fat" cells induced by cold and capsinoids are indeed likely beige fat,
because they don't show up on scans used to detect concentrated regions
of brown fat cells.
"The most interesting thing about this
study from a treatment point of view is the capsinoids," said Jan
Nedergaard, a physiologist at Stockholm University in Sweden who wasn't
involved in the study. Reduction of fat from cold exposure was expected,
he said, but "as everybody realizes, that's a difficult thing to put
into practice."
Drug development?
The study is
exciting because it suggests chemicals that induce brown fat could be
used to fight obesity, although they'd probably work better at keeping
healthy people from becoming fat, rather than making obese people
skinny, Nedergaard said. "Everybody would like to take a fat person and
make him slim, but that demands a high-burning capacity that BAT
probably doesn't have."
Capsinoids appear to induce brown fat
in the same way as cold, by "capturing" the same cellular system that
the body's nervous systemuses to increase heat production, Yoneshiro
said. Drug developers want to use similar drugs to activate this system,
but capsinoids themselves probably won't be used because they already
exist in nature and thus cannot be patented, a major way that
pharmaceutical companies make money, Nedergaard said.
Capsinoids come from "sweet" chili peppers that don't taste hot, but
produce some of the same physiological effects — for example, producing
sweat,
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