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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Paleo, Menopause, and Weight Gain, Part 1

    Last Modified: Jan 31, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    Itโ€™s the โ€œspare tire,โ€ the โ€œmenopot,โ€ or simply the dreaded โ€œbelly fat.โ€ Itโ€™s stubborn, itโ€™s flabby, and itโ€™s heading straight for your waistlineโ€ฆor is it?

    belly fat

    Weight gain during and after menopause has achieved almost legendary status. But if you actually look at the research, it just doesnโ€™t support the idea of menopause per se having some magical hip-padding effect.

    Not convinced? Take a look at the research, the reasoning, and what it actually means to you in the real world.

    What Is Menopause?

    From a practical perspective, menopause is usually โ€œdiagnosedโ€ when a woman has missed her regular menstrual periods for 1 year, but this is really just the most obvious symptom: biologically speaking, itโ€™s more useful to define menopause as a set of healthy and normal hormonal changes that cause a woman to cease ovulating. These changes include:

    • Lower estrogen levels
    • Lower progesterone levels
    • Lower testosterone levels

    Taken all together, these changes do cause regular menstrual cycles to stop, but they cause a lot else besides! And one of those extra challenges is the legendary menopausal weight gain.

    Fortunately, a huge body of research has been dedicated to menopause, most notably the Study of Womenโ€™s Health Across the Nation (SWAN). SWAN has given us a wealth of data on menopause, some of which might surprise you! 

    Does Menopause Cause Weight Gain?

    There are plenty of anecdotes about menopausal weight gain and plenty of women who blame โ€œtheir hormonesโ€ for unwelcome pounds, but according to the cold, hard data from the SWAN study and other trials, menopause itself does not cause any extra weight gain. For example, this review found no โ€œextraโ€ effect of menopause beyond the average 1-pound per year weight gain of adults in general.

    This is supported by a 2000 Cochrane Review which found that estrogen therapy had no effect on body weight or BMI (if hormone replacement does not prevent the weight gain, hormonal changes are unlikely to cause it).

    On the other hand, plenty of women do gain weight around the time of menopause. It just isnโ€™t caused by the menopause itself. The unwelcome fat accumulation that so many women notice is really due to:

    • Age-related metabolic slowdown: after age 40, the human metabolism naturally slows about 5% every 10 years. For example, take a 140-pound woman. At age 25, her metabolism alone would need 1452 calories*; at age 55, that number would fall to 1311. Thatโ€™s a drop of 141 calories per day. If she continues to eat the same amount of food and doesnโ€™t increase her activity, sheโ€™ll gain weight just from eating like she always has.
    • Lower activity levels: many people become less active as they age, especially if their knees or their back start hurting. And this can happen younger than you think. In the SWAN data, for example, 1 of every 10 women aged 40 to 55 had some kind of mobility trouble.

    *Thatโ€™s without accounting for any activity whatsoever; she would burn 1452 calories if she spent all day in a coma. To actually live, of course she needs more, depending on her activity levels.

    This is actually good news, because it means thereโ€™s nothing magical about menopause that dooms anyone to unavoidable weight gain. The same strategies that work for weight loss at any other time of life will work for menopause as well.

    What About Body Composition?

    Some menopausal women donโ€™t notice the number on the scale change at all. But they do notice an unwelcome change in body composition: less muscle and more fat (and in more dangerous places). And this time, menopause really is to blame.

    The drop in estrogen levels means that postmenopausal women have a different pattern of fat storage. In women of reproductive age, estrogen prompts fat storage around the hips and thighs. Technically known as subcutaneous fat, this is the โ€œgood fatโ€ that doesnโ€™t pose any health risk; in fact, it helps a womanโ€™s body prepare for the physical challenges of pregnancy and breastfeeding. If you can pinch your fat and it's squishy, it's subcutaneous fat.

    But when estrogen levels fall during menopause, women tend to see a more masculine pattern of fat deposition. Instead of the healthy subcutaneous fat, they get unhealthy visceral fat, technically called โ€œcentral adiposity,โ€ but commonly lamented as a โ€œbeer bellyโ€ or โ€œspare tire.โ€ Visceral fat is stored around the organs instead of just under the skin, and itโ€™s a significant risk factor for metabolic and cardiovascular diseases. If your fat is harder (not squishy) and not pinchable, it's visceral fat.

    From the SWAN data, we know that lower levels of estrogen are associated with visceral fat accumulation. And other studies have shown that estrogen replacement therapy brings a small improvement in central adiposity, suggesting that the hormonal changes of menopause, not just aging in general, are to blame for this effect.

    What About Insulin Resistance?

    Menopause is associated with a small but significant rise in insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome (difficulty metabolizing carbohydrates, leading to increasing problems with carbs causing weight gain). Researchers working with the SWAN data estimated that women in their first year of menopause were 45% more likely than premenopausal women to develop metabolic syndrome, and postmenopausal women were 24% more likely โ€“ and the difference could not be accounted for by age, BMI, or other confounding factors.

    On the other hand, some studies (like this one) found that the rise in insulin resistance could be entirely explained by age, with no observable effect from menopause per se. But whether itโ€™s menopause or just aging, older women do see a progressively higher risk of metabolic syndrome.

    Avoiding Menopausal Weight Gain

    So far, we know that:

    • Menopause per se does not automatically cause weight gain (although many women do struggle to keep weight off after menopause)
    • Menopause probably does slightly worsen body composition (more fat and less muscle)
    • Age is associated with an increase in insulin resistance, although itโ€™s not clear whether or not this is specific to menopause.

    That doesnโ€™t sound too great. But actually, itโ€™s good news: if weight gain around menopause is not โ€œhormonalโ€ or inevitable, it means you can do something about it! It means that even if you finally find Paleo during or post-menopause, you still have the chance to get your own body where youโ€™d like it to be.

    And that leads to the million-dollar question: what exactly can you do about it? For practical tips, read on to Part 2!

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