Chances are you’ve
seen more than a few ads online for "flat belly diets," or diets that
promise to reduce your waistline and melt away abdominal fat if you eat and
avoid certain foods. Menopausal women are often the intended audience if these
diet ads. But is there any truth to their diet claims? Can having a flat belly
really be as easy as eating the right combination of foods?
"Absolutely
not," says Alexa Schmitt, RD, a clinical nutritionist at Massachusetts
General Hospital. "There is no particular food that causes excess belly
fat," she says. Fat develops on the body when "calories that are not
utilized as energy become stored as fat." These excess calories can come
from any food; there is no one special food that is responsible.
As for where fat is
stored and what factors affect it, Schmitt says fat can accumulate anywhere on
a body. "It’s genetically determined," she says. Menopause does
affect fat accumulation, but researchers are still debating why this happens.
As we age, our metabolism slows down, which means that we use up energy
from food at a slower rate. One study found that as women approach the age of
menopause, their rate of physical activity tends to decline. A slower
metabolism, combined with the tendency to get less exercise, is a perfect
recipe for weight gain. And heredity affects how you store this added weight:
If your mother stores weight in her midsection, you might find your own body
responding similarly.
Sorting Out Flat Belly
Diet Claims
Some foods get blamed
for excess abdominal fat, while others are touted as the fastest route to a
flat belly. Here is a quick look:
Corn Syrup. Corn syrup is
controversial, Schmitt says. Lipogenesis is the term that describes the way
that carbohydrates are turned into fat, and there is evidence to suggest that
fructose, the type of sugar in corn syrup, is metabolized differently from
glucose, found in the white sugar you buy at the grocery store. However, though
we know that the body converts fructose into fat differently from the way it
converts glucose into fat, there is no evidence to suggest that this difference
targets a particular body part.
Alleged flat belly
foods. Avocados, olives, vegetable oils, and nuts have been hailed as
miracle foods that can reduce abdominal fats. Though there is plenty of
evidence linking these foods to such benefits as lower heart disease risk,
there is no evidence to suggest that they will target your belly and melt away
abdominal fat.
Whole grains. One small but
tantalizing study found that obese people on a reduced-calorie diet who ate
only whole grains lost more fat in the abdominal region than
those who ate refined grains. The study of 50 people, published in 2008 in the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, may point the way toward further
research.
Your Best Action Plan
for a Flat Belly
If avoiding or
consuming certain foods doesn’t get rid of fat, what will?
·
Monitor your caloric intake. Eating too many
high-calorie foods can leave you with more calories than you need. Fat
accumulation is the result of consuming more food than you need to fuel you through
the day, explains Schmitt.
·
Watch portion size. According to Schmitt, no foods are
off limits, per se, but we need to consider portion size and frequency. Choosing red meat
less than twice a week can lower our overall fat intake and has the added
benefit of keeping cholesterol levels in check. This is also true for women
around the time of menopause. As our metabolic rates decline, we can help
prevent weight gain by consuming fewer calories at each meal.
·
Eat the right kind of fat. Schmitt says we
need to limit our intake of saturated fats — found in foods such as red meat,
cream, and butter — to less than 10 percent of our diet. Foods such as fish,
olive oil, avocado, and walnuts are great sources of unsaturated fats, which
can work to lower your levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, the
"bad" kind.
·
Exercise regularly. Exercise can help you use more
energy and burn off accumulated fat. The study on physical activity also found
good news for menopausal women: Women who exercise more gain less weight during
menopause; and even women who exercise less can slow and reverse their weight
gain by increasing their exercise frequency.
The flat belly myth is
pervasive in exercise as well, Schmitt says. While exercise will help you burn
fat over your entire body, it all comes back to genetics, which determines
where you store fat, and the areas that will tone up first — no matter how many
special crunches or push-ups you do.
So eat a healthy, balanced diet, exercise, and don't sweat how flat
your belly is.