Although fat is ingested through foods it is not secreted out of the body like any other ingested thing. It gets stored in the body and it is a useful energy storage. When need the body taps into its fat storage for some excess energy. It must be burned off by exercising or taken out surgically.
Along the walls of the small intestine are structures called villi, which absorb soluble products of digestion (e.g. amino acids and glucose) from the intestine into the blood. Inside each villi is a lacteal, and it's this which specifically removes the digested fats from the small intestine.
there, I am studying health at college, and I found out the other day that fast leaves the body by your stool (Poo).
lacteal
You go by height and weight.
Cardiovascular disease due to increased fat storage in the body.
It turns into fat
Yes & no. Percent of body fat adds to your weight, but so does muscle. You could weigh 300 pounds and have 100% body fat, or a lot of muscle. See my point?
this depends on a persons body type, a simple diet will not reduce a persons belly fat by itself it must be accompanied by an appropriate amount of exercise
You can't transplant your fat cells into another persons body. In rare cases some identical twins can share there fat cells. You can transfer your fat cells from one part of your body to a new location on your own body.
No. Obesity is classified by measuring a persons weight. The persons body fat percentage should also be considered.
DESTROYS IT. That's a lie, fat stores energy for later use. And the problem isn't really fat in a persons diet making him/her overweight/fat it's the sugar, SUGAR destroys you, not fat.
Respiration or conversion to bile acids and excreation in feaces.
It slows it - the drug must leave the fat cells before it can be eliminated.
a persons muscle on their body will eventually turn into fat, and/or extra skin, all in all, you will lose all of what you have earned.
It takes sugar three to four hours to process in your body. You either burn it, or it turns to fat.