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if you go on a diet and lose weight
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where exactly does all that body fat go
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let's talk about that
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how's it going guys my name is Richie
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Kerwin and today we're going to talk
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about something that I'm surprised we've
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never actually spoken about before we
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obviously talk a lot about nutrition on
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this channel and we've spoken a lot in
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the past about how to lose weight but if
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I follow my own advice and lose 10 kilos
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of body fat where does it all actually
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go 10 kilos of fat doesn't just
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disappear into thin air right well
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buckle up because we're going to find
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out exactly what happens to that layer
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of insulation when we diet
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the first thing to understand is why
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does fat loss actually happen if you
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haven't watched any of my videos before
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and if you haven't you're in for a treat
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you'll know that fat loss occurs when
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the body is in a calorie deficit what
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does that actually mean that's when
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we're eating less energy from food than
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we're burning in activity energy is
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measured using calories or in the case
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of nutrition kilo calories but we still
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say calories just because we're lazy one
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kilocalorie is the amount of energy
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needed to heat one kilogram of Water by
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one degree Celsius that might sound
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pretty obscure but think of it like this
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everything your body does from staying
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warm pumping your blood processing
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information with your brain moving
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yourself around reducing sweat all of
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that needs energy and we get that energy
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from the food we eat if we take in more
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food energy than our body needs to fuel
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right now our bodies are really good at
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storing that extra energy for later and
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the best way our body does that is by
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building up stores of body fat in fact
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in a 70 kilogram person with about 15
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body fat they have around 10 kilograms
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of body fat and that works out at about
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90 000 calories of stored energy or
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enough to theoretically last from 35 to
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45 days or more fat makes up between 92
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and 98 of the energy stores in our body
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with the rest being stored as glycogen
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which is a type of carbohydrate we store
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in our muscles as lower having that
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store of energy is really useful for
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when we can't get enough food energy to
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meet our daily needs when we haven't
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eaten in a while and our body needs
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energy it dips into our body fat stores
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but before I explain how let's talk
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about the form that fat is stored in our
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body our body fat stores are made up of
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cells called adipocytes adipose tissue
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is the scientific term for body fat and
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each adipocyte contains one large fat
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droplet that is made up of millions of
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molecules of something called
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triglycerides a triglyceride is the
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basic unit of fat and is made up of
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three fatty acids which are long chains
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of carbon atoms attached to a backbone
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molecule called glycerol hence
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triglycerides I go into a lot more
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detail on the different types of fatty
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acids in my video on fish oils so check
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it out when we're low on energy our body
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can detect this and needs to get energy
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from our fat stores so it sends a signal
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to our cells to produce enzymes called
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lipases lipases break down triglycerides
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into fatty acids and glycerol and these
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can then pass out of our cells and into
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the blood fat doesn't dissolve well in
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water so those fatty acids get
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transported by carrier molecules called
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lipoproteins to the parts of the body
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glycerol is soluble in water and can
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travel without a transporter protein the
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glycerol is mostly used in the liver to
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produce glucose and this process is
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called gluconeogenesis
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when glycerol gets converted into
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glucose it loses some of the carbon it
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contains as carbon dioxide let's
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remember that carbon dioxide for later
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that glucose that gets produced by
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gluconeogensis can be used by special
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tissues that prefer to use glucose like
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the brain and red blood cells glucose
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usually gets burned or oxidized in a
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process called aerobic respiration
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basically glucose passes through a
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number of different steps in the cell
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where it's broken down by glycolysis and
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later inside our mitochondria in a
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process called a Krebs cycle
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as it gets broken down by enzymes it
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releases energy along the way
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that energy is used to make the famous
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energy currency of the cell ATP or
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adenosine triphosphate ATP is what our
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body uses to fuel all the magic things
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our bodies are capable of like running
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marathons creating beautiful works of
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art and staring at YouTube videos for
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hours at a time as glucose is broken
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down to make ATP carbon dioxide and
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water molecules are produced as waste
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products and we'll talk about those
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later too so what happens to the fatty
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acids well when the fatty acids get
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released from our cells they can go to
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two different places one of those places
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is the liver just like the glycerol in
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the liver fatty acids get converted to
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something called ketones which are the
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substance produced in high amounts when
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someone doesn't eat carbohydrates like
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on a keto diet those ketones can't be
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used for energy in the liver but can be
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used by other organs like the heart the
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muscles and even the brain when glucose
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is low just like glucose ketones can be
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metabolized by the Krebs cycle in the
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mitochondria of cells to produce ATP
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and along the way more carbon dioxide is
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produced as a byproduct fatty acids
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themselves can also be used directly for
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energy production in tissues like our
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muscles and especially in our heart
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which actually gets up to 90 percent of
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its energy from burning fatty acids with
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the rest coming from other fuels like
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glucose and ketones fatty acids get
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transported into our cells mitochondria
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and are metabolized for energy in two
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the first step is called beta oxidation
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and this means that the long fatty acid
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chain has little pieces broken off two
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carbon atoms at a time like I said fatty
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acids are chains of carbon atoms with
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hydrogen atoms attached and it's easy to
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imagine the enzyme in our mitochondria
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working their way along the chain
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cutting off two carbon atoms at a time
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as that happens some water is also lost
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as a byproduct the piece of the chain
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that gets cut off then enters the Krebs
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cycle which we mentioned earlier and is
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used to make ATP and some more carbon
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dioxide gets produced so we just
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described how body fat gets metabolized
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first by being broken down into glycerol
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and fatty acids and then how the glucose
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ketones or fatty acids are produced and
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broken down to give us ATP
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if you've gotten this far well done but
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you're probably thinking this guy said
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he was going to tell us where the body
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fat actually goes well if you're paying
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attention I've kind of already given a
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hint you see I already said our body fat
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was stored as triglycerides and that
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these are made up of molecules of carbon
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hydrogen and oxygen through all the
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process of getting broken down to make
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energy I've also mentioned that there
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are two main byproducts carbon dioxide
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and water that's what's happened to your
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body fat it's been chemically converted
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into molecules of carbon dioxide and
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water then you just breathe out carbon
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dioxide and some water vapor via your
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lungs and some of that water gets
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sweated out or peed out of your system
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so when you're in a calorie deficit and
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you need to dip into your body fat
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stores for energy you're either
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breathing out sweating out or peeing out
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that carbon dioxide in water that used
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to be your body fat so now you know and
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have a story to bore people with at
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parties you're very welcome as always if
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you have any more questions let me know
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in the comments below and remember to
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like And subscribe to the my protein
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YouTube channel for more great
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evidence-based nutrition information