If you eat only fruit, veggies and lean meat, it makes sense that your gut bacteria would be different from someone who eats high levels of processed carbs and sugars. The things you eat already are known to cause body fat.
Links like this do not seem like a leap forward, to me.
Did they control for the critically important variable: the subject's diet?
That's assuming that slim people are always people who eat perfectly healthy. Yet seems we all know that one skinny person who eats the worst food ever, and never gets fat.
No, it's that some extreme outliers have insane BMRs. It's still a calories-in-calories-out situation, it's just their base calories out is so high without doing anything special it's like a superpower. I've only met a few, but it's a real thing! Most of us go through something similar (but to a lesser extent) in our teen years. A few seem to keep it forever.
I'm curious whether anyone can provide some scientific evidence supporting the theory that these people actually burn calories faster? Seems like it should show up very clearly on their core body temperature (thermodynamics and all).
An alternative hypothesis would be that these people have a less efficient digestive system, so more of the calories just pass through.
Links like this do not seem like a leap forward, to me.
Did they control for the critically important variable: the subject's diet?