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  • What Causes Beer Belly & How To Get Rid Of It

    Published on September 7, 2021
    The Truth About Your Beer Belly | Causes, Health Risks, & How To Lose It

    You’re probably familiar with the infamous beer belly, known scientifically as abdominal obesity. 

    Among Americans and many other urbanized populations, this physical condition has become extremely common. It is also quite worrying in terms of a person’s long-term health outlook.

    But are beer guts actually caused by beer consumption? And, what can be done if you’ve developed a spare tire of your own?

    The Truth About Beer & Your Belly

    Myth: Drink a lot of beer, get a beer belly.

    Truth: It depends on the situation.

    Excessive consumption of beer can certainly cause your belly to grow, but beer isn’t the only cause of abdominal obesity. 

    There are plenty of people who develop excess belly fat despite never drinking beer or alcohol at all. It depends on the individual and how their body reacts to his or her diet and lifestyle.

    Beer & Abdominal Obesity

    Many studies have indeed found that alcohol (and beer in particular) is associated with a tendency towards abdominal obesity, especially chronic heavy alcohol consumption in men. 

    But different studies have reached different conclusions and proposed different mechanisms to explain this association. Ultimately, the following is what we do know for certain.

    Beer Belly Cause

    Abdominal obesity shares the root cause of any other form of obesity: excess calorie consumption.

    If the body takes in more energy than it needs, whether those calories are presented in food or drink, it will store a portion of that energy for future use, packing it into adipose deposits (fat cells), which then swell and divide over time.

    While it is possible to shrink these adipose cells by maintaining a calorie deficit (using more calories than you bring in) it is very difficult to eliminate new fat cells once they’ve formed. This makes it harder and harder to lose body weight and keep it off the longer you carry it.

    Beer Belly Risk Factors

    There are several other factors which are thought to increase a person’s likelihood for developing abdominal obesity. These include high consumption of:

    • sugar, especially fructose (found in soft drinks, fruit juices, and many other sources)
    • trans fats (found in many industrial cooking oils)
    • meat
    • highly-processed foods
    • high-calorie alcoholic drinks (beer and mixed drinks)

    Other factors include:

    • high levels of daily stress
    • maternal smoking (potentially contributing to future abdominal obesity in the developing fetus)
    • estrogenic compounds (compounds that mimic the structure of the hormone estrogen, including byproducts of common plastics)
    • endocrine-disrupting chemicals

    Beer Bellies & Health Risks

    Abdominal obesity can impact a person’s self-image, self-confidence, and the likelihood that they will go out and work to maintain a healthy lifestyle.

    But visceral fat, or fat stored deep under the skin around the organs, is also known to have many less-visible health impacts, even when compared with subcutaneous fats and other body fat. 

    This includes increasing a person’s risk of developing:

    • metabolic syndrome
    • type 2 diabetes
    • high blood pressure
    • cardiovascular disease
    • asthma
    • Alzheimer’s disease

    How To Lose Belly Fat

    Unfortunately, sit-ups alone won’t give you a six-pack if you struggle with abdominal obesity. Neither will giving up ice cream, switching to light beer, or signing up for the next miracle cure advertised online. 

    Instead, the only way to manage abdominal obesity and any other form of unwanted weight gain is to make focused and long-term lifestyle changes. 

    This includes increasing physical activity and consuming fewer calories to force the body to use the energy already stored in your abdominal fat.

    Weight Loss Strategies 

    Additional strategies that may help you lose weight include:

    • mixing aerobic and resistance exercise, which has been found to provide more benefit than aerobic exercise alone
    • eating a low or no-carb diet, as this may prompt the body to enter a state of ketosis, converting fat to ketones for fuel
    • intermittent fasting, waiting an extended period (often 16 or 20 hours) between meal periods so that the body uses stored fat, without heavily limiting your meal selections when you do eat
    • eliminate liquid calories by drinking water exclusively, as many drinks ranging from fancy coffees to soft-drinks, fruit juices, and alcoholic beverages are exceedingly high in sugar

    If you recognize the many health benefits that giving up alcohol could provide, but have been unable to follow-through when you’ve tried in the past, please contact us today to learn about our treatment options.

    Written by Ark Behavioral Health Editorial Team
    ©2024 Ark National Holdings, LLC. | All Rights Reserved.
    This page does not provide medical advice.
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