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Everything You Need To Know About Loose
Skin After Weight Loss
By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.burnthefat.com
If you're overweight or if you've been overweight in the past, then you
know that getting rid of excess pounds is only one of the challenges you
face. Once the fat is gone, you are often confronted with an equally
frustrating cosmetic problem; Loose skin.
I know this is a big problem because I receive a ton of e-mail from
people who have loose skin or from overweight people who are concerned
about having loose skin after they lose the weight. Just recently, I
received this email from a reader of my syndicated “Burn The Fat” Q & A
column:
“‘Tom, I began a fat loss program using your Burn The Fat program and it
worked so well I got down to 15 1/2 stones (from 19). However, this has
caused me a problem: Excess abdominal skin. I didn't crash lose this
weight, it came off at the rate of about 2 lbs. per week just like you
recommended. Now I'm unsure of whether to carry on, as my abdomen has
quite a lot of excess skin - I feel like I've turned into a bloody
Shar-Pei! (You know, that ‘wrinkly’ dog!)
Does everyone go through this? Will the skin tighten up? I was
overweight for more than 12 years. Am I going to end up needing surgical
skin removal? Can you offer me any advice? I'm a medical student in the
UK and my colleagues seem determined to proffer surgery as the only
option.”
There are 12 things you should know about loose skin after very large
weight losses:
1. Skin is incredibly elastic. Just look at what women go through during
pregnancy. Skin has the ability to expand and contract to a remarkable
degree.
2. Elasticity of skin tends to decrease with age. Wrinkling and loss of
elasticity is partly the consequence of aging (genetic factors) and also
a result of environmental factors such as oxidative stress, excessive
sun exposure, and nutritional deficiency. The environmental parts you
can fix, the genetics and age part, you cannot. Advice: Get moving and
change the things you have control over... Be realistic and don't worry
about those things you don't have control over.
3. How much your skin will return to its former tautness depends partly
on age. The older you get, the more an extremely large weight loss can
leave loose skin that will not return to normal.
4. How long you have extra weight and stretched skin has a lot to do
with how much the skin will become taut after the weight loss: For
example, compare a 9 month pregnancy with 9 years carrying 100 excess
pounds.
5. How much excess weight was carried has a lot to do with how much the
skin will resume a tight appearance. Your skin can only be stretched so
much and be expected to "snap back" one hundred percent.
6. How fast the weight was gained also has a lot to do with how much the
skin will resume a tight appearance. Your skin can only be stretched so
quickly and be expected to "snap back."
7. How fast weight is lost also has a lot to do with how much the skin
will tighten up. Rapid weight loss doesn't allow the skin time to slowly
resume to normal. (yet another reason to lose fat slowly; 1-2 pounds per
week, 3 pounds at the most if you have a lot of weight to lose, and even
then, only if you are measuring body fat and you’re certain it's fat
you’re losing, not lean tissue).
8. There are exceptions to all of the above; i.e, people who gained and
then lost incredible amounts of weight quickly at age 50 or 60, and
their skin returned 100% to normal.
9. There are many creams advertised as having the ability to restore the
tightness of your skin. None work – at least not permanently and
measurably – and especially if you have a lot of loose skin. Don't waste
your money.
10. If you’re considering surgical skin removal, consult a physician for
advice because this is not a minor operation, but keep in mind that your
plastic surgeon may be making his BMW payments with your abdominoplasty
money. (It’s possible that surgery may be recommended in situations
where it's not 100% necessary). Surgery should be left as the ABSOLUTE
FINAL option in extreme cases.
11. Give your skin time. Your skin will get tighter as your body fat
gets lower. I've seen and heard of many cases where the skin gradually
tightened up, at least partially, after a one or two year period where
the weight loss was maintained and exercise continued.
12. Know your body fat percentage before even thinking about surgery.
Loose skin is one thing, but still having body fat is another. Be honest
with yourself and do that by taking your body fat measurement. This can
be done with skinfold calipers or a variety of other devices (calipers
might not be the best method if you have large folds of loose skin. Look
into impedance analysis, underwater weighing, DEXA or Bod Pod).
Suppose for example, a man drops from 35% body fat all the way down to
20%. He should be congratulated, but I would tell him, "Don't complain
about loose skin, your body fat is still high. Press onward and keep
getting leaner.”
Average body fat for men is in the mid teens (16% or so) Good body fat
for men is 10-12%, and single digits is extremely lean (men shouldn’t
expect to look “ripped” with 100% tight skin on the abs unless they have
single digit body fat, and women low to mid teens).
Except in extreme cases, you are very unlikely to see someone with loose
skin who has very low body fat. It's quite remarkable how much your skin
can tighten up and literally start to “cling” to your abdominal muscles
once your body fat goes from “average” to "excellent." Someone with
legitimate single digit body fat and loose skin is a rare sight.
So... the key to getting tighter skin is to lose more body fat, up to
the point where your body composition rating is BETTER than average (in
the “good” to “great” category, not just "okay"). Only AFTER you reach
your long term body fat percentage goal should you give thought to
"excess skin removal." At that point, admittedly, there are bound to be
a few isolated cases where surgery is necessary if you can’t live with
the amount of loose skin remaining.
However, unless you are really, really lean, it's difficult to get a
clear picture of what is loose skin, what is just remaining body fat and
how much further the skin will tighten up when the rest of the fat is
lost.
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 more than 200 articles and been featured in 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
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