Drinking water alone will make you gain weight." I wonder if you'll really gain weight from drinking water, but the resentment of the so-called "fattening constitution," which is an excuse for touching your thick belly and chin, is always a comfort for many overweight and obese people. It's a blindfolded excuse to ease the guilt of lack of exercise or diet failure, but when I see friends and celebrities on TV who eat as much as they want but boast their V-line faces with thin waist, I wonder if the curse of "fattening constitution" is really on me. Even skinny people who can't gain weight no matter how much they eat because they're worried about gaining weight, don't seem bored.
Social and physical demands for weight control have been pressing modern people day by day, not only admiration for their slim body but also the risk of various adult diseases. And this is one of the biggest concerns that cannot be avoided in the field of mental health medicine, which has plagued patients and doctors. Among the main treatments for schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, which are classified as "anti-psychotic drugs," there are many drugs that have excellent effects and low side effects, but can cause serious weight gain and metabolic disorders if taken for a long time. Therefore, young women who are sensitive to weight gain, appearance, beauty, elderly people who are at risk for adult diseases, and diabetics often have to turn to other treatments, even though there are very good drugs to improve symptoms. If so, wouldn't it be possible to make patients who take fattening drugs "unfattening constitution" so that the royal road to psychosis treatment can be opened? No, it may be a secret comparable to modern alchemy if it is actually possible to develop a "no fat constitution," not just psychopaths.
Studies in Translational Psychology, a prominent psychiatric journal called Molecular Psychiatry, have shown significant differences in weight changes in mice with metabolic disorders called olanzapine and weight-raising antipsychotics. Depending on the composition of bacteria living in colonies in the colon, it was found that olanzapine did not gain weight or increase blood sugar levels. Germs living in the intestines effect the expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism or the action of acetyl Co-A carboxlase-1 which can cause different weight changes and metabolic changes depending on the composition of the bacterial gun. That is, the germs in our stomach are our constitution. It is said that it contributes to the formation of a fattening constitution and a non-fatting constitution.
In the average adult male, our body is said to consist of about 60 trillion cells per person. And there are about 600 trillion intestinal bacteria living in the colon of ordinary people per person. An incomparable number of germs form their own ecosystem in the intestines than the cells that make up our bodies. And their ecosystems are constantly changing and circulating depending on what we eat - what we supply to the intestines - and dominating the host's metabolic system out of sight.
The aforementioned studies have changed intestinal bacterial guns by taking antibiotics in oral doses, but recent studies published in medical journals such as Proc Natl Acad Sci USA and Idian J Endocrinol Metab show that obesity control is also actively underway. Although clinical research on people has not yet revealed any clear results. However, it may be expected that the administration of amorphous antipsychotics accompanied by changes in intestinal bacterial guns will open a new way to treat psychosis without metabolic side effects. No, in addition to antipsychotic patients, a new solution may be opened to more and more people who dream of slim figure for patients suffering from hyperlipidemia and diabetes.
On how to notify uninvited guests of the termination of the contract who "make them gain weight by drinking water" and ask new guests for the blessing of "not gaining weight."