DIFFERENCE FROM THIN TO FAT BODY WEIGHT

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Difference from thin to fat

When young the difference between thin and normal, when older between normal and (slightly) fat.

Ideal: normal in youth, slightly overweight in old age.

By the way, in terms of this issue, the beginning of Decrepitude is 60.

There is an exception; you have such a body structure that you will be more beautiful if you are a little overweight, or if you are a little thin.

If you want to be measured with this exception, the above measure.

These measurements are also suitable for health.

The dress looks good.

You don’t need a fit body when you’re old.

We are not born normal; we are not normal either, especially if we don’t try.

The doctors don’t care about your beauty, be healthy, but they want you to be skin and bones.

Normal(i.e. fit body) is possible in youth, do not force the body in old age. I remember someone who played sports to be like an artist. He even got an offer for a movie, but he died a few months later.

It is not obvious in youth, he even looks valiant, but a big young man is the story.

I mean, I’ve always been bulky, too, so despite my masculine appearance, I couldn’t capture masculinity, I’ve always been ashamed of my excess. But now it’s good, I have some meat on the edge in the corner. Well, I’m in my 60s now, and I don’t have to look like a man. I will not experience the bone man trauma that the medics recommend. At the same age as me, I counted all the bones in your hand one by one! My hand is the same as my 20-year-old hand.

The raw material of love, beauty and genius life is meat!

You will not be normal, especially weak, in old age; you will have some meat in the corner on the edge for melting, wear and tear.

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President of Organ Transplant Center at MedicalPark Hospital Antalya

Turkey's world-renowned organ transplant specialist. Dr. Demirbaş has 104 international publications and 102 national publications.

Physician's Resume:

Born on August 7, 1963 in Çorum, Prof. Dr. Alper Demirbaş has been continuing his work as the President of MedicalPark Antalya Hospital Organ Transplantation Center since 2008.

Prof. who performed the first tissue incompatible kidney transplant in Turkey, the first blood type incompatible kidney transplant, the first kidney-pancreas transplant program and the first cadaveric donor and live donor liver transplant in Antalya. Dr. As of August 2016, Alper Demirbaş has performed 4900 kidney transplants, 500 liver transplants and 95 pancreas transplants.

In addition to being the chairman of 6 national congresses, he has also been an invited speaker at 12 international and 65 national scientific congresses. Dr. Alper Demirbaş was married and the father of 1 girl and 1 boy.

Awards:

Eczacibasi Medical Award of 2002, Akdeniz University Service Award of 2005, Izder Medical Man of the Year Award of 2006, BÖHAK Medical Man of the Year Award of 2007, Sabah Mediterranean Newspaper Scientist of the Year Award of 2007, ANTIKAD Scientist of the Year Award of 2009, Social Ethics Association Award of 2010, Işık University Medical Man of the Year Award of 2015, VTV Antalya's Brand Value Award of 2015.

Certificates:

Doctor of Medicine Degree Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine Ankara, General Surgeon Ministry of Health Turkey EKFMG (0-477-343-8), University of Miami School of Medicine Member of Multiple Organ Transplant, ASTS Multiorgan Transplant Scholarship. Lecturer at Kyoto University. Lecturer at University of Essen, Research assistant at the University of Cambridge .

Professional Members:

American Society of Transplant Surgeons, American Transplantation Society Nominated, Middle East and Southern Africa Council Transplantation Society 2007, International Liver Transplantation Association, Turkish Transplantation Association, Turkish Society of Surgery, Turkish Hepatobiliary Surgery Association.

Disclaimer:

Our website contents consist of articles approved by our Web and Medical Editorial Board with the contributions of our physicians. Our contents are prepared only for informational purposes for public benefit. Be sure to consult your doctor for diagnosis and treatment.
Medically Reviewed by Professor Doctor Alper Demirbaş
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