No it is not any other one I know for sure
Answer:
It takes fewer calories to maintain fat tissue than muscle tissue
Explanation:
Obesity deals with an individual having a dangerously high level of fat in the body. This increases the risk of a heart attack due to the fat clogging the arteries and hindering normal blood flow.
Excess calories from food store in the body as fats under tissues called adipose tissues.
Isaac’s weight loss by dieting may be difficult because it takes fewer calories to maintain fat tissue than muscle tissue.
Answer:
Showering 10000%. You smell good you're good.
<span>Anyone
telling you cardio burns fat is dead wrong. If you plan on doing
steady-state cardio (running laps non-stop) work, you MUST have a heart
rate monitor and stay within a very specific heart rate range. Most
steady-state cardio for even lean athletes puts their heart beyond a
fat-burning range very quickly..................
ALSO:
</span>
<span>If
you have or can get a heart rate monitor, great. You'll need to do some
ground work to determine your heart rate zones, but this is the only
guaranteed way to ensure you're burning fat, not muscle.
If you don't have a HRM, interval training is your next best bet. Do 60
(yes sixty) sets of 8 seconds of full on sprinting/cycling/etc. followed
by 12 seconds of rest/recovery effort.
If that sounds like something you can't or won't do, lifting heavy
weights is the next best option. Building lean muscle mass will drive
your metabolism and force your body to burn more calories (at a lower
heart rate) than steady-state cardio. I hope this helps you ^-^</span>
Answer:
way 1: there is only a high chasm