Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle
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Body
Wraps and Waist Wraps:
The difference between losing fat and losing inches
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Title: Body Wraps and Waist
Wraps - The difference between losing fat and losing inches
By line: By Tom Venuto, CSCS, NSCA-CPT
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Word count: 1029 words
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Body Wraps and
Waist Wraps: The Difference Between Losing Fat And Losing Inches
By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.BurnTheFat.com
www.BurnTheFatInnerCircle.com
"Body wraps" have been around for ages in the
weight loss and spa industry. Claims include loss of body weight, loss
of body fat, and loss of inches. Infomercials for rubber
“waist belts" are also back on TV and similar claims are made
for these types of wraps as well. What few people realize is that there
is a huge difference between losing fat and losing inches. When your
body fat decreases, your circumference measurements will usually also
decrease, but “fat” loss and
“inch” loss are not one in the same. If you
don’t know how to tell the difference, you could be falling
for one of the oldest, most notorious fitness and weight loss scams in
the book.
The truth is, body wraps and waist belts do not
shrink fat cells or burn body fat - no matter what type of wrap is
used: bandages, plastic, foil, vinyl, or rubber and regardless of what
you are wrapped in: herbs, minerals, enzymes, seaweed, clay, or mud -
it doesn't matter. Fat can only be lost with a caloric deficit from a
reduction in food intake, an increase in activity or ideally, a
combination of both.
Whenever you see fat loss claims for wraps or any
other product which doesn't involve a caloric deficit created though
nutrition or exercise, the “scam alarm” should go
off in your head, and you should always stay away, no matter how
compelling the sales pitch.
Furthermore, the companies making fat loss claims
would be in hot water with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) if they
were investigated and caught because claims for body fat reduction from
wraps cannot be supported with scientific evidence.
The FTC as well as numerous state attorney
general's offices have already taken action against body wrap companies
in the past for false advertising and unsupported claims. Some
companies simply had to stop making false claims, others had to pay
stiff fines as well. The problem, from a legal and ethical standpoint,
is the claim being made. Remember, "inches" and "fat" are not the same
thing.
Some types of wraps can definitely take off inches
(for example, they might reduce the circumference measurement of your
waist, hips, arms and legs), but it's not fat, its water weight and
fluid, and the results are temporary.
Suppose this claim is made in an advertisement:
* Lose Up To 15 inches in 1 Hour! *
This is legal advertising because the claim "lose
inches" might be supportable (if enough circumference measurements are
taken with a tape measure at enough sites, that might add up to a total
of 15 inches in circumference loss)
However I believe that these types of claims are
misleading (and probably intentionally so), because "inches" is not the
same as body fat but the product vendors know that you might easily
confuse "inches" with "fat."
Contrast that claim with this one:
* Lose Body Fat without diet or exercise in 1
Hour!*
That claim is totally false and scientifically
unsupportable.
Again, body wraps cannot burn fat or "shrink fat
cells."
If fat loss could be achieved with body wraps, it
would be very easy to test and prove.
Body composition (body fat) testing (rather than
measurements of inches) could be performed before and after the wrap,
and the answer ("does it work") would become easily exposed.
Since it doesn't work, you won't find any wrap
people accepting your challenge to allow you to do independent body
composition testing, nor will you find a shred of scientific evidence
showing reduction of bodyfat from wraps.
Unfortunately, bogus fat loss claims are still
quite widespread, as a simple Internet search for "body wrap" will
demonstrate. The most frequently used claims however, are for loss of
"inches."
The inches lost simply come from loss of fluid.
And guess what - those inches (and or water weight) will come right
back in days if not hours, as soon as you completely re-hydrate
yourself.
Other claims made for body wraps include
detoxification, improved circulation and tighter, smoother and clearer
skin. Most health and fitness researchers, as well as government
agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will tell you
that these claims are "debatable" and mostly anecdotal.
Some experts even warn that certain types of wraps
can be dangerous, mainly due to the rapid and excessive fluid
loss/dehydration.
If you want to get wrapped because you find it
relaxing or you consider it a "spa-like" treatment, that's one thing.
Just remember, wraps have absolutely nothing to do with fat loss.
I'd suggest completely avoiding any companies that
advertise fat loss when it's only water and inches you're losing,
because a dishonest company is one you don't want to patronize at all.
One last thing – this is a timely
subject because although "body wraps" have been around for ages and
it's old news, I noticed that infomercials for "waist belts" or
“sauna wraps” are back on TV in force and I see
that they are replaying the ads over and over again, which means people
are buying it.
Everything I just said about body wraps also
applies to those rubber waist belts too.
On a web search I just did for those rubber belt
waist wraps, I noticed some of the websites are STILL making claims
like "Melt fat" (totally bogus, unsupported and illegal claim).
Other sites seem to be wary of the FTC paying them
a visit, so they do a whole song and dance around the legal issues by
saying stuff like, "sweat away inches," "therapeutic heat", "target
your problem areas" and so on. Even if these claims are not illegal,
the promotions are still deceptive…
The professional fitness model is pictured taking
off the rubber belt, revealing ripped six pack abs below... as if those
abs are a result of wearing the belt! Wishful thinking! These are
professional models, folks. They got the abs the same way everyone else
with abs got them - with a calorie deficit from a combination of strict
diet and hard training!
Wraps and waist belt products might take off some
inches or water weight, but they can’t take off a single
ounce of fat. Buyer beware.
Programs like Burn The Fat, Feed The
Muscle are focused on FAT LOSS, not water loss or
loss of inches. When body fat decreases, circumferences in inches will
also decrease, but "fat" lost and "inches" lost are not one in the same.
About the Author:
Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural bodybuilder, an
NSCA-certified personal trainer (CPT), certified strength &
conditioning specialist (CSCS), and author of the #1 best-selling
e-book, "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle.”
Tom has written hundreds of articles and has been featured in print
magazines such as IRONMAN, Australian IRONMAN, Natural Bodybuilding,
Muscular Development, Exercise for Men and Men’s Exercise, as
well as on hundreds of websites worldwide. For information on Tom's Fat
Loss program, visit: www.burnthefat.com.
To learn more about Tom's Fat Loss Support Community, visit: www.burnthefatinnercircle.com
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