Insulin resistance is one of the most pervasive metabolic conditions in America, affecting an estimated 88 million adults — and the vast majority don’t know they have it. Yet insulin resistance doesn’t just cause blood sugar problems. It creates a cascade of hormonal disruptions that drive weight gain, fatigue, polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) in women, low testosterone in men, cardiovascular disease, and accelerated aging. Understanding and treating insulin resistance is often the cornerstone of effective hormone optimization at MultiGen Wellness.
What Is Insulin Resistance?
Normally, when you eat carbohydrates, your blood glucose rises and your pancreas releases insulin to shuttle glucose into cells for energy. In insulin resistance, cells become less responsive to insulin’s signal. The pancreas compensates by producing more and more insulin — and for years, blood sugar stays relatively normal while insulin levels skyrocket. This hyperinsulinemia is the metabolically dangerous state that causes downstream damage long before blood sugar actually becomes abnormal.
How Insulin Resistance Disrupts Hormones
Chronically elevated insulin has direct hormonal consequences:
- In women: High insulin stimulates the ovaries to produce excess androgens (testosterone and DHEA), a pattern central to PCOS. It also disrupts the LH surge needed for ovulation. High insulin raises IGF-1, which amplifies androgen effects, causing acne, hirsutism, and irregular periods.
- In men: Insulin resistance promotes aromatase activity (the enzyme that converts testosterone to estrogen), raising estradiol and lowering free testosterone. Visceral fat from insulin resistance is itself an endocrine organ that further worsens the hormonal environment.
- For everyone: High insulin suppresses SHBG (sex hormone binding globulin), which sounds beneficial but actually reflects overall hormonal dysregulation. High insulin also promotes thyroid hormone conversion problems and cortisol dysregulation.
Testing for Insulin Resistance
Standard fasting glucose tests often miss early insulin resistance because glucose stays normal for years while insulin rises. At MultiGen Wellness, we test fasting insulin alongside glucose, calculating HOMA-IR (a measure of insulin resistance). We also evaluate HbA1c, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, and waist circumference — all components of the metabolic syndrome picture.
Treatment: From Lifestyle to Medication
Addressing insulin resistance improves hormone function across the board. Approaches include structured low-glycemic nutrition, strategic exercise (particularly resistance training and HIIT), sleep optimization, and medications like metformin or GLP-1 agonists (semaglutide) where appropriate. Testosterone optimization for men often significantly improves insulin sensitivity as a secondary effect.
Think insulin resistance might be driving your hormonal issues? Call (800) 259-0015 or book your free comprehensive metabolic evaluation today.