Understanding Sugar Intolerance in Midlife
As someone who has helped thousands navigate weight loss after 45, I see sugar intolerance frequently. You feel bloated, foggy, or exhausted after even small amounts of carbohydrates. This is not simple “eating too much sugar.” In our book The Midlife Reset, we explain how hormonal shifts in perimenopause and menopause drive insulin resistance, making cells less responsive to insulin and causing blood sugar swings that feel like intolerance.
Many also battle SIBO (Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth). Excess bacteria in the small intestine ferment sugars and starches, producing gas, diarrhea or constipation, and nutrient malabsorption. Joint pain often worsens because inflammation from SIBO or blood-sugar instability aggravates arthritis. Diabetes and high blood pressure add complexity because standard diets ignore these gut-hormone links.
Is It SIBO, Insulin Resistance, or Both?
SIBO symptoms overlap with hormonal changes: bloating within 90 minutes of eating, fatigue, joint pain, and stubborn weight. The difference lies in testing. SIBO is diagnosed via lactulose or glucose breath testing that measures hydrogen and methane. Insulin resistance shows on fasting insulin, HbA1c, or an oral glucose tolerance test. Many patients have both—hormones slow gut motility, allowing bacteria to overgrow.
Insurance rarely covers functional tests, so preparation is key. Track symptoms for two weeks: note exact foods, timing of bloating, joint pain levels (1-10), and energy crashes. This data proves the problem is medical, not “just diet failure.”
Script to Talk to Your Doctor Effectively
Bring a one-page summary. Start with: “I’ve failed multiple diets and suspect sugar intolerance. I tracked symptoms and suspect SIBO or insulin resistance related to hormonal changes. Can we order a breath test and fasting insulin?”
Ask specific questions: “Would a lactulose breath test rule out SIBO? Could my joint pain and blood pressure improve if we treat gut bacteria or improve insulin sensitivity?” Mention your embarrassment is gone—you need answers. If dismissed, request a gastroenterology or endocrinology referral. Many middle-income patients use GoodRx for affordable breath tests ($150–$250) when insurance denies.
Practical Next Steps While You Wait
Follow a low-fermentation eating pattern from The Midlife Reset: choose easily digested proteins, non-starchy vegetables, and small portions of resistant starch at night only. Avoid sugar alcohols and high-FODMAP foods for 14 days. Gentle walking after meals lowers blood sugar without stressing painful joints. Reintroduce one suspected food every three days to confirm triggers.
Most see reduced bloating and 4–7 pounds lost in the first month when both gut and hormonal factors are addressed. This evidence-based approach builds trust with your doctor and creates momentum for sustainable weight loss despite diabetes, blood pressure meds, and past diet failures.