In clinic we have many clients come to us frustrated with not being able to lose weight. They feel like they have done it all…. eat clean, count calories, train 7x days a week and still see no results. 

Unfortunately, weight loss is much more than calories in vs calories out.

There are many underlying drivers that can influence our body composition, and this is often not investigated properly!

This includes; stress hormones, sex hormones, liver function, gut bacteria, thyroid function, insulin, the nervous system, and emotions. 

As clinical nutritionist our primary focus is to investigate the complexities of these issues and the underlying drivers that may be affecting your ability to shift weight.

Top 5 underlying reasons why you are not losing weight:
  1. Insulin resistance

    Insulin is a pancreatic hormone that regulates the metabolism of protein, fats, and carbohydrates, promoting the uptake of glucose into cells and stabilising blood sugar levels. Recirculating insulin can lead to insulin resistance, effecting the metabolism of glucose from foods into our body cells. Too much insulin generates inflammation and causes weight gain. Insulin resistance is a primary driver in PCOS due to insulin triggering excess androgen production by the ovaries, stimulating increased adipocytes.

  2. Reproductive hormone imbalances

    Hormonal imbalances are becoming more common in women due to high stress and endocrine disrupting chemicals. Poor metabolism and detoxification of oestrogen in the gut and liver can lead to re-circulating oestrogen in the body, creating oestrogen dominance. Oestrogen dominance may be indicated by heavy periods, tender breasts, heightened emotions and fluid retention -making you feel a lot heavier than you are! Excess amounts of oestrogen can store in fat tissues making it challenging for the body to metabolise fats. Furthermore, oestrogen is dominant over progesterone (causing high oestrogen and low progesterone), which is an essential counterbalancing hormone that helps burn fat and get rid of excess fluid.

  3. Digestive issues and gut dysbiosis

    Imbalances within the gut microbiome (dysbiosis) can lead to bacteria overgrowth or reduced bacteria diversity. This shift in microbiota can lead to a disruption in metabolic pathways and influence energy extraction from the diet, lipid metabolism, immune function, and endocrine functions (hormones). This can lead too decreased satiety, increase inflammation, increased triglyceride incorporation and decreased fatty acid oxidation, resulting in weight gain.

  4. Stress

    When we are stressed, this means that our sympathetic nervous system (SNS) is activated, and the body is secreting adrenaline and cortisol. When the SNS is constantly activated your body will predominately choose glucose as its fuel source, as it doesn’t feel safe enough to use fat as fuel. Prolonged cortisol production can lead to dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and may lead to alterations in blood glucose regulation and satiety signalling telling us we’re full. This can cause metabolic issues contributing to body fat accumulation.

  5. Thyroid hormonal and thyroid autoimmune conditions

    The thyroid is a vital hormone gland that regulates cellular metabolism and many body functions. This includes regulating basal metabolic rate, stimulates the breakdown of proteins, fats and glucose and enhances cholesterol excretion. The most common type of thyroid disorder is hypothyroidism (under-active thyroid). This occurs when the thyroid doesn’t produce enough thyroid hormones. One of the major symptoms of hypothyroidism is weight gain, as the metabolism slows down, therefore you will not burn off calories as quickly.

    So you have identified the 5 key reasons why you might not be losing weight? Whats next?

    Pure Health has just bought out a new 12 week holistic weight loss program that specifically works on all 5 areas, as well as looking into calorie consumption and emotional drivers.

    Click here to find out more