4 Energy Regulation System · 4.5 Energy Sufficiency Boundary
4.5 Energy Sufficiency Boundary
Human Fat-Based Metabolism
This page is structured as definition, control variables, causal chain, observable outputs, and boundary, and serves as a canonical definition node in Human FBM.
Energy sufficiency is a prerequisite boundary for Human FBM validity.
Without sufficiency, the system tends to produce stress output instead of steady-state output.
Long-term intake-expenditure relation determines whether operation stays inside the valid zone.
Lean-mass trend detects whether structural tissue is being compromised.
Hunger volatility and energy continuity detect stress compensation states.
Low exogenous carbohydrate input plus chronic energy insufficiency raises stress compensation and tissue risk.
Only with sufficiency can low-occupancy fatty-acid structure remain stable over time.
Inside boundary: satiety rhythm and daily energy continuity are more stable.
Outside boundary: fatigue, volatility, and execution decline become more frequent.
Low exogenous carbohydrate input alone cannot substitute for energy sufficiency judgment.
Starvation-pattern output is outside Human FBM validity.