All symptoms

By symptom

Weight loss resistance.

You eat well, you train, the scale doesn't move. Something deeper is in the way.

What’s actually going on

How I think about this.

Weight loss resistance is one of the most frustrating presentations in adult medicine. The patient is doing the work, often more than their friends who are losing weight effortlessly, and nothing is changing. The conventional answer (“eat less, move more”) is both insulting and wrong here, because the calories-in-calories-out model assumes the body is running normally. In this presentation, it isn't.

The drivers I see most are insulin resistance (your cells stop responding to insulin, fat storage stays on while the rest of metabolism slows), thyroid drift (subclinical hypothyroid will absolutely prevent weight loss), the cortisol-weight loop (chronic stress signals the body to hold fat around the middle), inadequate protein (the muscle you lose during a deficit drags resting metabolic rate down), sleep loss (one week of bad sleep is enough to register in insulin sensitivity and hunger hormones), and gut dysbiosis (the bacterial population shifts in ways that change how many calories you extract from the same food).

For women specifically, perimenopause changes the metabolic calculus, and the strategies that worked at 30 do not work at 45 without adjustment.

The physician’s lens

How I read this in practice.

I read weight loss resistance across the full metabolic and hormonal system. Fasting insulin alongside HbA1c, because insulin moves first by years. The full thyroid panel including reverse T3. Cortisol across the day. Sex hormones with binding proteins, especially in perimenopause. The metabolomic panel for the upstream nutrient and mitochondrial story. A DEXA scan to read what is actually changing in body composition while the scale stays flat. Often muscle loss is hidden under the same number.

What I’d test first

The data that explains it.

Weight loss resistance needs the metabolic and hormonal systems read together. Insulin and HbA1c, the full thyroid axis, sex hormones with binding proteins, the inflammation markers. The DEXA scan tells me whether the scale's stability hides muscle loss the patient cannot feel.

While you wait

Moves worth making before testing.

These are the levers I’d pull while we set up the workup. Most of them produce real signal inside two weeks.

  1. Eat 30 grams of protein at breakfast. Protein at the front of the day stabilizes everything that follows.
  2. Lift heavy two to three times a week. Muscle is the most expensive metabolic tissue you can build.
  3. Anchor sleep to a fixed wake time. Insulin sensitivity collapses faster from sleep loss than from almost any dietary mistake.
  4. Stop snacking between meals. The body needs digestive rest hours to read its own fuel state.

If two weeks of the basics doesn’t move the needle, that is exactly the kind of presentation a Precision Call exists for. Your biology is telling you something the lifestyle layer cannot fix on its own.

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A complimentary 30-minute call by phone or video with me. You tell me what is going on. I tell you how I would approach it. You decide if I am the right physician for you.