Where does fat go when you lose it?
What is fat?
Fat is extra energy that we store on our bodies. Any time you eat more than your body burns, that excess energy is converted into a storage form and placed various places in your body. The most problematic of these aesthetically (and health wise) is in fat cells, which translate to the padding you carry on your body. Some body fat is healthy and necessary – women require a certain amount in order to produce hormones necessary to maintain their period and become pregnant. Too much fat can be detrimental to our health.
Fat cells
Fat cells are located throughout our body and increase or decrease in size. The average human has 10 billion to 30 billion fat cells located around their body. An obese person can have up to 100 billion. Usually, fatty acids are stored inside these fat cells, making them increase in size. This tends to be genetic – certain people gain and lose fat in certain areas preferentially over others. It’s possible for your body to increase the number of fat cells on their body when they become obese. However, there is no way to “lose” fat cells. When you lose fat off your body, you’re shrinking the size of the fat cells, not getting rid of them.
How do you get rid of fat cells?
Liposuction is the only way to actually remove the fat cells. Otherwise, they remain deflated throughout your body.
So what happens when you lose fat?
Like I said above, the fat cells shrink. If you create a caloric deficit your body pulls energy from these storage forms of fat and uses that. As it pulls the energy out of the fat cells they shrink. That fat is used for energy, and the byproducts are excreted in your urine or feces.
Can the fat cells increase in size again?
Yes. If you start consuming more energy than your body can burn your fat cells will increase in size as that extra energy is stored in them.