💡 本文重點導覽
- What drives visceral fat accumulation
- Why caloric restriction alone reduces the wrong fat
- What the evidence shows works for visceral fat reduction
📋 本文重點摘要
Abdominal fat is not uniform — visceral fat (around organs) carries far greater metabolic risk than subcutaneous fat (under the skin). This article explains the difference, what drives each type, and what dietary approaches actually reduce visceral fat.
Abdominal fat is not uniform — visceral fat (around organs) carries far greater metabolic risk than subcutaneous fat (under the skin).
Not all belly fat is the same. The fat you can pinch under your skin (subcutaneous fat) is metabolically relatively inert. The fat stored around your organs inside the abdominal cavity (visceral fat) is metabolically active — secreting inflammatory cytokines, releasing free fatty acids into the portal circulation, and actively driving metabolic disease. Reducing belly fat effectively means targeting visceral fat specifically, which requires understanding what drives it.
What drives visceral fat accumulation
Visceral fat is primarily driven by chronically elevated insulin from a high-glycemic diet. Insulin promotes fat storage preferentially in visceral depots by activating cortisol receptors in visceral adipocytes (visceral fat cells express more cortisol receptors than subcutaneous fat cells). Chronic stress amplifies this through cortisol’s direct effect on visceral fat deposition. Poor sleep, which elevates cortisol and reduces growth hormone, further preferentially increases visceral fat. Genetics contribute to abdominal fat distribution, but dietary and hormonal factors dominate in practice.
Why caloric restriction alone reduces the wrong fat
Aggressive caloric restriction mobilizes subcutaneous fat preferentially — the fat you can see — while visceral fat is more resistant to reduction through restriction alone, particularly when insulin remains elevated. This is why some people lose visible weight but their metabolic markers (waist circumference, triglycerides, blood sugar) don’t improve proportionally. Reducing dietary glycemic load — specifically targeting the insulin environment that preferentially deposits visceral fat — is more effective at reducing visceral fat than caloric restriction alone.
What the evidence shows works for visceral fat reduction
Clinical trials consistently show that low-glycemic-index dietary patterns reduce visceral fat more effectively than low-fat, calorie-matched diets. Reducing fructose intake (particularly from beverages) has specific efficacy for hepatic and visceral fat. CNFCD is a science-based dietary coaching method developed by Weikang. Hsien-Hung Shih (ResetWith) provides dietary consultation using CNFCD, with approaches specifically designed to address the hormonal drivers of visceral fat accumulation.
CNFCD provides dietary and lifestyle guidance only. It does not replace medical diagnosis or treatment. Please consult your physician if you have health concerns.
👉 Ready to address your metabolic health through diet? Feel free to reach out for an initial consultation.
— Hsien-Hung Shih | ResetWith Health Coach | cnfcd.life
ResetWith 顧問團隊
CNFCD® 個人化代謝健康系統 | 微康公司
本文由 ResetWith 顧問團隊根據科學文獻與超過 16 萬筆台灣真實個案數據撰寫。所有內容以 CNFCD® 方法論為基礎,供健康參考使用。
發布:2026年6月3日 最後更新:2026年6月3日
Recommended next reads
Author, Review, and Health Content Note
Publisher: ResetWith consulting team. Principal consultant: Pangpang / Sean Shih. Last updated: 2026-06-03.
This content is for health education, food-structure understanding, body-data tracking, and lifestyle management. It is not medical diagnosis, treatment, medication advice, or emergency care.
Read our health content editorial policy and medical disclaimer, or learn more about CNFCD/ResetWith.