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Weight and Metabolism

Podcast de Dr Deepti Sharma, MD

inglés

Desarrollo personal y salud

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Dr. Deepti Sharma is a triple board-certified physician in Family Medicine, Obesity, and Lifestyle Medicine. She is also a certified menopause practitioner by The Menopause Society (previously NAMS) and a certified life coach. For over a decade, her clinical practice has focused on guiding individuals towards optimal health through evidence-based strategies. She recognizes the unique challenges many individuals face in understanding their metabolism and managing their weight. This podcast is dedicated to addressing those specific nuances and providing clarity amidst widespread misinformation. Each episode will delve into the science behind effective weight management and metabolic health exploring the critical roles of nutrition, physical activity, sleep, and mental well-being. Please remember that while she is a doctor, she is not your doctor. This podcast is meant for educational and informational purposes only, not medical advice. Please consult your physician for your specific questions and needs. Presented by Dr Deepti Sharma, MD Learn more at www.weightandmetabolism.com

Todos los episodios

26 episodios

episode ACE - Adverse Childhood Experiences and their impact on our health artwork

ACE - Adverse Childhood Experiences and their impact on our health

In this foundational episode, Dr. Sharma — triple board-certified physician, certified Menopause Practitioner, and certified life coach — unpacks adverse childhood experiences from the ground up. What counts as an ACE. Why the metabolic consequences of early trauma can look like willpower problems, lifestyle failures, or "unexplained" disease — and why that framing is wrong. ACEs aren't just a childhood story. They reshape the stress response, dysregulate the HPA axis, and leave a biological fingerprint that shows up decades later as chronic disease, metabolic dysfunction, and yes — obesity. In this broad overview episode, Dr. Sharma breaks down what ACEs actually are, how they wire the nervous system for survival in ways that can work against us in adulthood, and why understanding this science isn't about blame — it's about finally having a framework that makes sense of so much suffering. Whether you're a patient trying to understand your own health history, or a clinician looking to bring more trauma-informed care into your practice, this episode meets you where you are. This is the foundation. Stay tuned — the next episode goes deeper into what we can actually do with this knowledge.

18 de may de 2026 - 4 min
episode Contributing Factors to Obesity — Genetics, Epigenetics, Hormones, and Set Point Theory artwork

Contributing Factors to Obesity — Genetics, Epigenetics, Hormones, and Set Point Theory

In the next few episodes, I want to talk about the contributing factors or causes of obesity in detail. The number one thing is genetics. Genetic predisposition plays a foundational role, influencing metabolic processes, fat storage, and appetite regulation. However, genetics alone do not dictate outcomes. This introduces the concept of epigenetics, which refers to changes in gene expression due to environmental factors like diet, stress, and even prenatal influences. Think of genetics as the blueprint or instruction manual. Epigenetics is like a light switch that turns certain genes on or off. Dysfunction within neurohormonal pathways disrupts the delicate balance of hunger and satiety signals, metabolic rate, and fat distribution. Hormones like leptin, ghrelin, insulin, and cortisol interact in ways that can drive excessive weight gain when dysregulated. This brings us to the set point theory of body fat mass, which suggests that our body has a predetermined range of fat mass or weight that it naturally tries to defend. Fat mass is a physiologically regulated phenotype, tightly regulated just like body temperature and pH. Obesity results from abnormal regulation of body fat mass, meaning changes in underlying biology lead the body to an elevated fat mass. This is why obesity is a disease. When you lose weight, your body activates mechanisms to regain it, such as increasing hunger, reducing energy expenditure, and increasing cravings. Adipose tissue is not just a blob of yellow cushiony tissue. It's a powerful and dynamic organ producing over 600 adipokines or hormones, including leptin, adiponectin, resistin, and TNF-alpha. They drive hormone regulation and dysregulation, contributing to metabolic processes involved in appetite regulation, insulin sensitivity, inflammation, and the pathogenesis of heart disease, chronic disease, and cancer. Leptin is the satiety hormone that helps us feel full. However, too much leptin leads to leptin resistance, where the brain becomes resistant to the hormone's message, resulting in reduced satiety, overeating, and weight gain. Research shows that calorie-dense processed foods impair the brain's leptin signaling. Insulin is another key player. When we eat calorie-dense meals, glucose rises rapidly, making the pancreas pump out insulin. Over time, with too much glucose and fat accumulating, insulin doesn't work as well, resulting in insulin resistance, the precursor to pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes. Insulin is an anabolic hormone that signals the body to store fat and increase hunger. Other important gut hormones include ghrelin (the hunger hormone), GLP-1 and GIP (satiety hormones targeted by medications like Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, and Zepbound), glucagon (maintains blood glucose levels during fasting), and amylin (suppresses appetite and slows gastric emptying). 🌐 Learn more at weightandmetabolism.com [https://www.weightandmetabolism.com]

11 de may de 2026 - 12 min
episode How Your Weight Impacts Your Health artwork

How Your Weight Impacts Your Health

Let's talk about what obesity actually does to your body — not to shame or scare you, but so you understand what's really at stake. In this episode, I walk through the hard science: obesity is an independent risk factor for sudden and premature death. All-cause mortality increases progressively with higher BMI, especially once you cross a BMI of 30. In the U.S. alone, obesity contributes to an estimated 300,000 deaths annually. For those with severe obesity (BMI over 40), life expectancy can be reduced by 5 to 20 years. But it's not just about lifespan — it's about how you live those years. Obesity affects every single organ system and is a central driver in the development of chronic diseases and 13 different types of cancer. We cover it all: * Cardiovascular disease: hypertension, coronary artery disease, stroke, heart failure, atrial fibrillation, peripheral vascular disease * Metabolic disorders: type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, metabolic syndrome * Respiratory issues: asthma, sleep apnea, hypoventilation syndrome * Gastrointestinal & liver disease: gallstones, reflux, IBS, fatty liver disease * Musculoskeletal problems: osteoarthritis, chronic pain, mobility issues, increased fall risk * Cancer: 13 confirmed obesity-related cancers, including colorectal, breast, endometrial, pancreatic, and more * Reproductive health: fertility issues, PCOS, erectile dysfunction, pregnancy complications * Mental health: depression, anxiety, body image struggles, stigma, and discrimination in healthcare This episode isn't meant to overwhelm you. It's meant to help you see why addressing obesity isn't about vanity — it's about protecting your health, your quality of life, and your future. 🌐 Learn more at weightandmetabolism.com [https://www.weightandmetabolism.com]

8 de may de 2026 - 4 min
episode The Obesity Epidemic by the Numbers artwork

The Obesity Epidemic by the Numbers

Let's talk about just how big this problem really is — because the stats are staggering. In 2022, 1 in 8 people globally were diagnosed with obesity. Adult obesity has more than doubled since 1990. Adolescent obesity? It's quadrupled. Here in the U.S., the numbers are even more alarming: more than 2 in 5 adults (42.4%) have obesity, and 1 in 11 adults have severe obesity. Among children and adolescents aged 2-19, nearly 1 in 5 (19.3%) have obesity, and 6.1% have severe obesity. If you include the overweight category, nearly 75% of U.S. adults are affected. And here's the kicker: despite decades of education about healthy eating and exercise, the numbers keep climbing. In fact, no country in the world has made significant progress in tackling obesity over the last 40 years. So what are we doing wrong? Why is this epidemic continuing to grow despite everything we know? That's the question we need to answer — and it starts with understanding that this isn't about individual failure. It's systemic. It's biological. It's environmental. And it requires a complete shift in how we approach prevention and treatment. In the next episode, we'll dive into the consequences of not addressing obesity — and why taking action matters now more than ever. 🌐 Learn more at weightandmetabolism.com [https://www.weightandmetabolism.com]

6 de may de 2026 - 2 min
episode Stress Eating — Understanding Emotional Eating and How to Break the Cycle artwork

Stress Eating — Understanding Emotional Eating and How to Break the Cycle

In this episode, let's talk about stress eating, also called emotional eating. It's when you eat in response to emotions rather than physical hunger. It's usually a way to cope with stress, anxiety, sadness, boredom, or even excitement. Why does it happen? Stress triggers the hormone cortisol in our body, which increases appetite and cravings, especially for sugary, salty, or high-fat foods. Eating releases dopamine, the brain's feel-good chemical, giving temporary relief from emotional discomfort. Once your brain recognizes this pattern and associates food with pleasure and comfort, it forms a habit loop. Signs you might be stress eating include eating suddenly and urgently without much thought, craving specific comfort foods rather than balanced meals, eating even when you're full, and feeling guilt, regret, or sluggishness afterward. How do you break the cycle? First, pause and check for hunger signals. Ask yourself: am I really hungry or am I seeking comfort? Identify your triggers by keeping a journal of what situations or emotions spark eating urges. For example, many women crave sugar during the premenstrual phase. Then find alternative coping mechanisms like taking a walk, deep breathing, stretching, listening to music, or talking to a friend. Managing stress proactively through regular exercise, good sleep, and mindfulness practices like meditation or prayer reduces cortisol levels over time. Creating a supportive food environment also helps: keep tempting trigger foods out of immediate reach and stock easy, healthy snacks like dates, nuts, or dark chocolate instead of cookies. The bottom line: think of your emotional hunger like a smoke alarm. It's a signal that something's off emotionally, and food is just one possible fire extinguisher. You can choose other options that won't leave a mess behind or feelings of guilt afterward. 🌐 Learn more at weightandmetabolism.com [https://www.weightandmetabolism.com]

4 de may de 2026 - 3 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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