Why You Must Talk to Your Doctor First

I cannot stress enough that a keto fasting workout challenge requires medical clearance—especially if you are 45-54, managing diabetes, blood pressure, or joint pain. Hormonal shifts in perimenopause and menopause slow metabolism by up to 15% and increase insulin resistance, making rapid dietary changes risky without oversight. Insurance rarely covers weight loss programs, so your doctor becomes your free safety net.

Preparing for the Conversation

Bring a one-page summary: current medications, recent labs (A1C, lipids, kidney function, electrolytes), blood pressure readings, and your exact plan. State clearly: “I want to follow a well-formulated ketogenic diet under 30g net carbs, combine it with 16:8 intermittent fasting, and start gentle resistance workouts three times weekly. My goal is 15-25 pounds of fat loss in 90 days while protecting my joints.” Mention past diet failures so your doctor knows you are serious about sustainable change.

Key Questions to Ask Your Doctor

Ask: “Given my diabetes and blood pressure meds, will keto require dose adjustments?” “Are my kidneys healthy enough for higher protein and potential electrolyte shifts during fasting?” “What exercise modifications protect my joints—perhaps chair-based strength or water walking?” “How often should we recheck labs—every 4 weeks?” In The Metabolic Reset Protocol I detail exactly which labs matter most: fasting insulin, CRP, and thyroid panel. Request copies of every result.

Safety Monitoring During Your 90-Day Challenge

Track daily blood glucose, ketones (0.5–3.0 mmol/L ideal), blood pressure, and energy. Expect an initial 3–7 day “keto flu” that proper electrolytes (4g sodium, 1g potassium, 300mg magnesium) usually resolve. If you feel dizzy, have heart palpitations, or see blood sugar below 70 mg/dL, stop fasting and call your doctor immediately. Start workouts at just 10–15 minutes; resistance bands and body-weight moves build strength without pounding inflamed joints. Most beginners lose 8–12 pounds in the first month when they combine keto, time-restricted eating, and consistent movement. Schedule a 30-day follow-up before you begin so adjustments can be made early. This conversation turns a risky trend into a medically supported metabolic reset.