By now, you’ve probably seen Khloe Kardashian,
Blac
Chyna, Jessica Alba, and a dozen other celebrities endorsing waist
trainers on Instagram and in magazines. They claim the trainers add curves and
flatten out post-baby tummies, helping them feel good about their bodies. But
the science behind waist training isn’t so hot — experts say the devices can
cause acid reflux, pulmonary edema, and more.
Listen, we’re
all about you doing whatever makes you feel your best. But when that comes at
the cost of bruised bones, dizziness, and pneumonia? We have to take pause. So
we took a look at what happens when you wear a waist trainer, body part by body
part.
Waist
The trainer will compress your waist
while you’re wearing it, pulling your skin, fat, muscles, and organs tighter,
which makes you look slimmer. What won’t happen: any permanent loss of inches
around your waist. “Wearing a corset won’t make you lose fat around your
waist,” Holly Phillips, MD, a New York City-based internist, told Yahoo Health.
Your waist will be trimmer while you’re wearing it, and immediately after
removing, but it won’t make any lasting difference.
Lungs
While most
trainers don’t come up high enough to compress your lungs, wearing one does
make it harder to allow air into your diaphragm, leaving your lungs starved for
oxygen. “Wearing [a waist trainer] for a long amount of time makes it hard to
breathe, so you’re taking more shallow breaths,” Phillips says. It can also
“lead to fluid in the lungs,” putting you at risk for pulmonary edema or
pneumonia.
Brain
Those
shallow breaths can leave you with an oxygen shortage, leaving you feeling
dizzy and light-headed. This can happen at a micro level (your thoughts may
seem scattered or hard to follow) or macro level (you can lose consciousness)
Rib Cage
While it’s
possible that excess fat can make your chest look bulkier than it is, some
women just have larger rib cages than others. A waist trainer can’t change
that, but using a too-small trainer or corset can cause your ribs to bruise,
which some may mistake for weight loss or a slimmer rib cage. “What is a myth
is that you can change your bone structure,” Phillips explains. “For [adult]
women, your bones are formed. You can bruise them and harm them, but you can’t
change them.” A waist trainer won’t slim down a wide rib cage — it’ll just
leave it bruised, or worse.
Veins
Not only
can wearing a waist trainer thin out your air supply, it can also “decrease
blood flow in your veins, cause problems with blood clots, and put more
pressure on your heart,” Andrew Miller, MD, a New York City-based plastic surgeon explained.
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