</P> Metabolic Inequality Not all weight is created.
Women are constantly frustrated by their inability to lose as much weight on a diet as most men can. In order to understand where this frustration comes from, let's take a closer look at the metabolic advantage men have over women.
Metabolic Inequality
Not all weight is created equal when it comes to maintaining an optimal metabolism. Muscle is the key metabolic engine of the body, and men carry, on average, 30 to 40 pounds more muscle than women do. Since body fat is shuttled into muscle as a primary energy source for the body, men are able to burn an average of 30 percent more calories than women. This is why it's easier for women to gain weight, and harder for them to take it off.
Around the age of 35, the average woman loses approximately one-half pound of muscle every year. The loss of this metabolic machinery puts women at risk of gaining at least one-and-one-half pounds of fat each year in its place.
The Estrogen Connection
How many times have we heard a woman say, "I might as well apply it directly to my hips"? At the centre of this frustration is a woman's primary sex hormone, estrogen. As with most hormones, estrogen production dwindles with age. Research has shown that fat cells become the primary site of estrogen manufacturing in postmenopausal women, and the enzyme responsible for manufacturing the extra estrogen (aromatase cytochrome P450) increases with age and seems to become concentrated in the hips and thighs.
The larger a woman's fat cells become, the more estrogen can be produced. In fact, research performed at the University of Pittsburgh showed that women who developed the largest fat cells produced at least 40 percent more estrogen than those with smaller fat cells.
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