Energy Metabolism
The 3 main sources of energy in your body are fatty acids, sugars and protein (disregarding alcohol).
Serum Energy
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 (mean molar mass 276.4 g/mol)[4] corresponding to about 192 mg/dl. That is about 10 gram per adult human, with a standard deviation of 2.6 gram.
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]