Understanding Normal A1C With Elevated Insulin
Many people in their mid-40s to mid-50s following a low-carb or ketogenic diet report a perplexing lab result: normal A1C (typically under 5.7%) yet fasting insulin above 10-15 μU/mL. This pattern often signals early insulin resistance despite stable average blood glucose. Your A1C reflects three-month glucose averages, but fasting insulin reveals how hard your pancreas works to maintain that control. On keto, reduced carb intake lowers glucose spikes, normalizing A1C quickly, yet lingering hormonal shifts from past high-carb diets or perimenopause can keep insulin elevated.
Why This Happens on Low-Carb and Keto Diets
Hormonal changes during your 40s and 50s amplify this disconnect. Declining estrogen increases visceral fat, prompting higher insulin output even on under 50g daily carbs. Stress, poor sleep, and joint pain limiting movement further elevate cortisol, which raises insulin. In my book, I explain the Insulin Sensitivity Reset Protocol that targets these root causes without complex meal plans. Many with type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure see initial A1C drops within 4-6 weeks on keto, but insulin may lag 3-6 months behind without specific tweaks like strategic protein timing (1.2-1.6g per kg ideal body weight) and 12-14 hour overnight fasts.
Actionable Steps to Lower Insulin While Keeping A1C Stable
Start by tracking both markers every 8-12 weeks. Add resistance exercises 2-3 times weekly using bodyweight or light bands—gentle on joints yet effective for improving sensitivity (aim for 20-30 minutes). Prioritize 7-9 hours sleep and 10-minute daily walks after meals to blunt postprandial insulin. Supplement wisely: 2000-4000 IU vitamin D, 400mg magnesium glycinate, and berberine (500mg twice daily with meals) can reduce fasting insulin 20-30% in studies of middle-aged adults. Avoid over-restricting calories, as this spikes cortisol. My approach in CFP Weight Loss emphasizes simple swaps—swap evening snacks for herbal tea and protein-rich breakfasts within a 10-hour eating window—to reverse this without gym schedules or expensive programs your insurance won't cover.
Long-Term Success and Monitoring
With consistent application, most see fasting insulin drop below 8 μU/mL within 4 months while A1C stays optimal. This reduces diabetes progression risk and eases joint pain through reduced inflammation. Don't be embarrassed to discuss these labs with your doctor—pairing them with my straightforward methodology empowers sustainable change. Focus on progress, not perfection, to overcome past diet failures and conflicting advice.