No
In terms of how your body deals with it, alcohol is basically sugar. It's not absorbed into body fat really, but it is easily converted into body fat.
Vitamin c
You will put on weight, as they are converted to fat, which is stored by the body.
Our body never shows fat deficiency because of carbohydrates and proteins are converted into fat which are stored in the body. BY----S.K4403
Excess glucose in the body is stored in the liver and muscles as glycogen. Once these glycogen stores are full, any additional glucose is converted into fat and stored in adipose tissue for long-term energy storage.
Energy (i.e calories). This stored fat can be converted easily into energy that your body can use - useful if there is no food available for a long time.
Energy (i.e calories). This stored fat can be converted easily into energy that your body can use - useful if there is no food available for a long time.
Unused calories are converted into and stored through out the body as fat. It is a natural response to the feast/famine cycle.
Excess amino acids in the body are typically converted into energy or stored as fat. The body processes them by breaking them down through a process called deamination, where the amino group is removed and converted into ammonia, which is then converted into urea and excreted through the urine. The remaining carbon skeleton of the amino acid can be used for energy or stored as fat.
Gets converted to fat and stored in the body! Please put your questions in the right category.
They are converted to glucose. Excess is stored as fat.
Sugar and carbohydrates are stored as body fat. This is extra energy that the body doesn't need and so it is stored as fat.