Energy Metabolism
The 3 main sources of energy in your body are fatty acids, sugars and protein (disregarding alcohol).
Serum Energy
![](/images/thumb/Serum-Fatty-Acids.jpg/300px-Serum-Fatty-Acids.jpg)
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Triglycerides (triacylglycerol) are the main constituents of adipose tissue (body fat) in humans. Fatty acid levels in adipose tissue reflect intake in years.[1] Serum fatty acids reflect intake in weeks.[2] Plasma is composed of all major circulating lipid species including triglycerides, phospholipids, cholesterol-esters and free fatty acids.[3]
Mean total serum fatty acid levels may be 6948 μmol/L [4] corresponding to about .. mg/dl (about . gram per human adult)
About 2 to 5% of serum fatty acids are free fatty acids. Serum reference levels for free fatty acids are 0.00-0.72 mmol/L.[5] / with a mean value of 7.5 nM (with a standard deviation of 2.5 nM), and a 1.5 nM increase after overnight fasting. [6]
Fasting
During starvation, utilisation of fatty acids from intracellular lipid droplets is increased, and autophagy mediated.[7]
Exercise
Not just daily exercise increases lipolysis in general [8], but also acute exercise increases lipolysis, specifically in the liver (not in skeletal muscle), accompanied by increased serum levels of free fatty acid, glycerol and ketone body.[9]
Better fitness is not associated with lower dietary fat intakes.[10] Increased physical activity reduces serum triglyceride levels.[11] At similar levels mean VO2, tennis match play relies more on glycolysis and glycogenolysis compared to continuous running exercise.[12]