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  2. Why Your Body Fat Percentage Matters and How to Reduce It - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/body-fat-percentage-way...

    “Some body fat is visible as subcutaneous fat just below the skin, while other body fat surrounds our organs and is used to sheath nerves and the brain,” explains John Martinez, M.D., a sports ...

  3. Is BMI or Body Fat More Important? - AOL

    www.aol.com/bmi-body-fat-more-important...

    BMI vs. Body Fat Percentage. BMI and body fat percentage are both ways of determining whether a person has a healthy weight or not. A high BMI can indicate a high body fat percentage, but it’s ...

  4. Is ‘fat but fit’ a real thing? Study says fitness better ...

    www.aol.com/fat-fit-real-thing-study-110207233.html

    Brisk walking for 30 minutes a day can have big positive impact on unfit people, researchers say

  5. Body fat percentage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_fat_percentage

    Essential body fat is necessary to maintain life and reproductive functions. The percentage of essential body fat for women is greater than that for men, due to the demands of childbearing and other hormonal functions. Storage body fat consists of fat accumulation in adipose tissue, part of which protects internal organs in the

  6. Adipose tissue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adipose_tissue

    Adipose tissue (also known as body fat or simply fat) is a loose connective tissue composed mostly of adipocytes. [1] [2] It also contains the stromal vascular fraction (SVF) of cells including preadipocytes, fibroblasts, vascular endothelial cells and a variety of immune cells such as adipose tissue macrophages.

  7. Weight gain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weight_gain

    If enough weight is gained due to increased body fat deposits, one may become overweight or obese, generally defined as having more body fat (adipose tissue) than is considered good for health. [1] The Body Mass Index (BMI) measures body weight in proportion to height and defines optimal, insufficient, and excessive weight based on the ratio. [2]

  8. Fat tissue discovery may explain why some people easily ...

    www.aol.com/fat-tissue-discovery-may-explain...

    A kind of memory of obesity may be retained by fat tissues even after weight loss, increasing the chance of some people regaining it, a new study suggests.. The research, published in the journal ...

  9. Obesity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obesity

    Body composition in general is hypothesized to help explain the existence of metabolically healthy obesity—the metabolically healthy obese are often found to have low amounts of ectopic fat (fat stored in tissues other than adipose tissue) despite having overall fat mass equivalent in weight to obese people with metabolic syndrome.