Why Time-Restricted Eating Improves Insulin Sensitivity
Compressing your eating window to 8–10 hours triggers cellular cleanup, improves glucose regulation, and resets metabolic signalling pathways that chronic snacking disrupts.
Compressing your eating window to 8–10 hours triggers cellular cleanup, improves glucose regulation, and resets metabolic signalling pathways that chronic snacking disrupts.
One night of poor sleep can reduce insulin sensitivity by up to 25%. We break down the cortisol cascade, growth hormone suppression, and what to do about it.
Zone 2 cardio — exercising at 60–70% of max heart rate — directly increases mitochondrial density and fat oxidation capacity more effectively than high-intensity intervals.
Standard bloodwork misses early metabolic dysfunction. Fasting insulin, ApoB, hs-CRP, HOMA-IR, and triglyceride-to-HDL ratio reveal what a standard lipid panel never will.
A week-by-week breakdown of the physiological changes you'll experience — from glucose stabilisation in weeks 1–4, to fat adaptation and hormonal rebalancing by week 12.
Linoleic acid oxidation, lipid peroxidation, and mitochondrial membrane composition — the mechanisms behind why seed oil consumption correlates with elevated hs-CRP markers.
Shifting your sleep window by even 90 minutes disrupts cortisol awakening response and downstream glucose regulation — even if total sleep hours remain the same.
Cold plunge protocols activate brown adipose tissue, upregulate PGC-1α, and improve mitochondrial biogenesis — but only when combined with metabolic nutritional support.
An HbA1c under 5.7% is labelled "normal" — but optimal metabolic function requires below 5.4%. The difference of 0.3% corresponds to years of accelerated ageing at the cellular level.