"Proponents of "spot reduction" presume that exercising a specific body part, such as the abdomen, causes the involved muscles to use local fat for energy. It's a nice idea, but scientifically unsound. The site from which fat initially is "burned," or metabolized, actually depends on the body's built-in, unalterable method [...]
[...] clinics throughout the USA are now reporting improved rates of weight loss while using Synephrine without the side effects of ephedrine. Clients have reported up to a 42% reduction in total body fat after using Synephrine. More and more physicians are beginning to view excess weight as a metabolic problem. This is evident by the widespread use [...]
[...] the study, the average fat loss from the thigh area by the end of the test period was 1/2 to 1 1/2 inches. However, the effectiveness of aminophylline cream for fat reduction is far from being scientifically proven. The small number of subjects participating in the study suggests that further research must be conducted to validate the [...]
[...] example, it is currently understood that when testosterone enters the cell cytoplasm it is subsequently converted to the more "active" androgen, dihydrotestosterone, DHT, by reduction at the 5alpha position, This is normal. Dihydrotestosterone is then either bound to a cytoplasmic "receptor" protein Rc, or is further metabolized to either [...]
[...] pisała piękna Amazone to zupełnie inna bajka... Lipoderm Ultra Containing Yohimbine Hydrochloride in Avant Labs' hydroalcoholic gel, Lipoderm ULTRA activates targeted fat reduction at the site(s) of application, while avoiding the negative side effects associated with systematic distribution. Expanding upon its predecessor's revolutionary [...]
[...] to the myostatin knockout mice (20-25% in the Belgian Blue and 200-300% in the null mice). Also, the cattle with myostatin mutations have reduced size of internal organs, reductions in female fertility, delay in sexual maturation, and lower viability of offspring (6). Although no heart abnormalities in myostatin-null mice were reported, the [...]
[...] of its metabolism -- which is the same in both the MEOS and ADH pathways (3) Another possibility is a futile cycle involving oxidation of alcohol to aldehyde followed by reduction back to alcohol (19). A few such cycles would completely eliminate net energy gain from alcohol, however, though there is some evidence for the existence of such [...]