Answer
If I remember correctly, water does not attach itself to fat. It is hydrophobic (water-hating). For example, have you ever opened up a can of chicken broth, and all the fat is floating around in the liquid? Water avoids fat. Fat usually attaches to our connective tissues, like the inside of our skin.
Body fat contains 10% water; lean muscle tissue contains about 75% water by weight, as is the brain and bone has 22% water. However, fat tissue does not have as much water as lean tissue. In adult women, fat makes up more of the body than men, so they have about 55% of their bodies made of water. Fat men also have less water (as a percentage) than thin men.
The essential fat percentage is different in males and females. Females have about 12 percent essential body fat, males' bodies are made up of 8 percent essential body fat.
to be honest i dont think theres any fat in there but my best bet is 1g
about 90% of your body fat is made of water. i like body fat :)
It doesnt have any fat in it
There are no fat grams in water. There are no calories in water. Pure water is something your body needs to be healthy.
depends on how much one pound of fat = one pound of water if you are referring to which is more dense, water would be the answer
I weigh 135. How much water do I need to take in to flush fat
Watermelon does not have any fat, it is mostly made of water and carbs.
it is porportional to how much fat you have, your metabolism, what you ate that day, if you ate that day, how much water you drink, what kind of work out you are doing, and how long you do it.
I wouldn't think the water would have much fat at all. The fat is in the seed itself.
It's a non-guilty pleasure! No fat at all. Your body needs so much of it so luckily it has none :) did this help at all?
If it is a fat soluble vitamin it is stored in you body fat, if it is a water soluble it is urinated away
Per 9 CFR 319.180(a), the standard of identity for a "frank" includes not more than 30% fat and not more than 40% of a combination of fat and water.
"Fat fat the water rat, fifty bullets in your hat."
water has no fat, no calories.
Camels are well known for their humps. However, they do not store water in them as is commonly believed; their humps are actually a reservoir of fatty tissue. When this tissue is metabolized, it is only a source of energy, but would yield more than 1 g of water for each 1 g of fat converted through reaction with oxygen from the air. This process of fat metabolization generates a net loss of water through respiration for the oxygen required to convert the fat.