We’ve all heard it: calories in vs. calories out.
And while that’s not wrong… it’s not complete.
Dr. McCarthy breaks down the three major approaches to weight loss:
1. Calorie restriction
2. Insulin management (low-carb, keto, etc.)
3. Exercise & performance
…and explains why each works—but still falls short on its own.
The missing piece?
The signal your food sends to your body.
This episode explores how ultra-processed foods:
- Disrupt hunger and satiety signals
- Spike blood sugar and drive cravings
- Bypass normal metabolic pathways
- Create instability in an otherwise well-designed system
Citations: Protea Mechanism-Anchored Evidence Map
Episode 4 — Insulin Is Not the Enemy: Misrouted Energy Is
Below are key scientific principles and supporting literature behind this episode. This is not about “proving a point”—it’s about giving you a transparent look at how these conclusions are built.
1. Energy Balance Is Real—But Regulated
Body weight isn’t controlled by calories alone. Hormones, the brain, appetite, and behavior all regulate how energy is used, stored, and burned.
Key refs: Hall et al. (2012); Speakman & Westerterp (2010)
2. Insulin Is a Traffic Director, Not the Villain
Insulin helps route nutrients (to muscle, liver, or fat). It doesn’t independently cause obesity—it directs where energy goes.
Key refs: Saltiel & Kahn (2001); Petersen & Shulman (2018)
3. No Single Model Explains Everything
Calories matter. Hormones matter. Behavior matters.
A complete model integrates all three—not just one.
Key refs: Ludwig et al. (2022); Hall & Chow (2015)
4. Exercise Helps—But Isn’t the Full Solution
Exercise improves metabolism and health, but often doesn’t override poor dietary signaling due to compensation (hunger, adaptation).
Key refs: Swift et al. (2014); Pontzer et al. (2016)
5. Food Is More Than Calories—It’s Information
Food sends signals that impact hunger, metabolism, hormones, and brain reward systems—not just energy intake.
Key refs: Morton et al. (2006); Friedman (2004)
6. Ultra-Processed Foods Disrupt Regulation
These foods increase intake by altering satiety, speed of eating, and reward pathways—leading to overeating.
Key refs: Hall et al. (2019); Monteiro et al. (2019)
7. Fructose Is Metabolized Differently
Fructose is processed primarily in the liver and more readily contributes to fat production (de novo lipogenesis).
Key refs: Tappy & Lê (2010); Softic et al. (2020)
8. Muscle & Protein Drive Metabolic Stability
Protein supports satiety and thermogenesis, while muscle helps regulate glucose and overall metabolic health.
Key refs: Leidy et al. (2015); DeFronzo et al. (2009)
Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.
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📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604
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Website: www.protealife.com
💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!