Weight gain is not always under your control, especially after 40, as underlying metabolic and hormonal changes that are largely outside of your direct control can make a weight loss diet less effective.
For the average woman over 40, the transition to perimenopause and menopause can be significantgradually eroding muscle mass, slowing the rate at which the body burns calories, and making fat accumulation much easier than it once was.
Weight gain during menopause is one of the most common and poorly understood changes in women’s metabolic health.
Declining estrogen levels can change the way the body uses and stores energycausing a series of metabolic imbalances long before women recognize what they are dealing with. For most, these changes are largely permanent, so willpower, strict routines, and surface-level lifestyle adjustments often stop working.
Responding to your body’s changing needs
At this stage of life, Accumulation of visceral fat is becoming a major health problem. Unlike subcutaneous fat, which is located under the skin, visceral fat is stored deeper in the abdomen, clustering around the internal organs.
It is metabolically active, meaning it can release fatty acids and inflammatory signaling molecules that can affect the liver, cardiovascular system, and insulin regulation.
When visceral fat increases, it is associated with a higher risk of insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease, even in people whose overall weight has not changed significantly.
This becomes especially important after menopause because hormonal changes can shift fat storage toward the abdomen and increase cardiometabolic risk. Excess body fat is also associated with a higher risk of certain hormone-sensitive cancers, including breast and endometrial cancer.
Outdated advice based primarily on eating less and exercising more has clear limitations for menopausal women whose metabolic rate, hormonal environment and ability to recover have changed substantially.
Restrictive dieting can accelerate muscle loss and often leads to weight gain after the restriction ends, which is why many women believe that strategies that once worked have stopped delivering results.
Metabolic medications prescribed for weight management are often really effective for women navigating this transition.
These drugs work by modulating appetite signaling and slowing gastric emptyingwhich reduces caloric intake without requiring the patient to overcome hunger through willpower alone.
Doctor-prescribed, physician-guided treatment can be particularly effective in reducing visceral fat, addressing the aspect of menopausal weight gain that poses the greatest long-term health risk.
Most women tolerate these treatments well, with side effects that are usually mild and manageable when the dose is gradually introduced and adjusted under appropriate medical supervision.
Why your doctor’s advice matters
Self-dosing and the supply of drugs from the black market are growing concerns in this area. Incorrect dosages, especially unnecessarily high ones, pose serious risks to women whose bodies are already dealing with hormonal and metabolic shocks.
Without proper medical supervision, patients may face a higher risk of serious side effectsaccelerated muscle loss, nutritional deficiencies and unnecessary physiological stress.
Menopause appears differently in each woman and at each stage, with the result that effective prescribing depends largely on the complete clinical picture.
Hormone levels, body composition, cardiovascular status, and metabolic history matter when doctors evaluate whether treatment is appropriate, what dose level is safe, and how a patient should be monitored over time.
An early perimenopausal woman with intact muscle mass and moderate cardiovascular risk may need a substantially different approach than a woman who is postmenopausal, insulin resistant, and experiencing significant muscle loss.
An experienced weight loss doctor will be able to accurately make this determination and design a holistic weight management program which includes diet, exercise and drug therapy as medically necessary.
Dosage should be conservative, progress monitored consistently, and medication tapered as the patient’s metabolism stabilizes. An attending clinician who has not discussed an endpoint with their patient has not completed the consultation.
Menopausal women now have access to medical tools that address the real problem, rather than relying on bad advice or what they believe may be wrong.
What has changed most is the clinical ability to treat it properly and the standard of care available today must reflect this.
By Dr Gerhard Vosloo, founder and chief consultant at BioWell
Author: Pedro van Gaalen
When he’s not writing about sports or health and fitness, Pedro is most likely out training for his next marathon or ultramarathon. She has worked as a fitness professional and as a marketing and comms specialist. He now combines his passions in his role as managing editor at Fitness magazine.
