The Moment Intermittent Fasting Stopped Working for Me
After helping thousands through my Core Four Protocol, I noticed a pattern in women aged 45-54. They’d start intermittent fasting with enthusiasm—16:8 windows, black coffee, bone broth—and drop the first 8-12 pounds. Then everything froze. No matter how clean the eating window or how consistent the schedule, the scale wouldn’t budge. That’s when I began asking patients, “Have you had your thyroid checked lately?”
For me personally, the realization hit around month four of my own fasting experiment. I was following the exact plan I teach—time-restricted eating aligned with circadian rhythm—yet my energy crashed mid-afternoon, my joints ached more than usual, and I couldn’t lose the last 18 pounds that had crept on during perimenopause. The metabolic slowdown felt different from previous diet failures. This time I suspected my thyroid.
Key Signs That Prompted My Thyroid Test
Three red flags emerged that made me schedule labs immediately. First, persistent cold hands and feet even in 75-degree rooms—classic low thyroid perfusion. Second, my resting heart rate dropped to the low 50s while my usual morning walk felt exhausting instead of energizing. Third, despite perfect adherence to my fasting protocol, my fasting blood glucose stayed stubbornly above 105 mg/dL, and my morning temperature never climbed past 97.2°F.
These weren’t random. In my book, I explain how declining estrogen in perimenopause reduces thyroid hormone conversion from T4 to the active T3 form. Intermittent fasting, while powerful for insulin sensitivity, can further stress an already struggling thyroid if nutrient density or sleep is off. I recommend testing TSH, free T3, free T4, reverse T3, and thyroid antibodies—far beyond the basic TSH most primary doctors order.
What the Labs Revealed and How I Adjusted
My TSH was 4.2—within “normal” range according to many labs but too high for optimal metabolic function in midlife women. Free T3 sat at the bottom of the range. Once I optimized with my physician (low-dose desiccated thyroid plus selenium, zinc, and iodine balance), my intermittent fasting results returned stronger than before. I lost the final 18 pounds in nine weeks while my joint pain decreased 60%.
The protocol adjustment was simple: shorten fasting windows to 14:10 during the first two weeks of thyroid support, emphasize morning protein within 90 minutes of waking, and add targeted resistance training twice weekly. No complicated meal plans—just three nutrient-dense plates per day that fit middle-income budgets and busy schedules.
Why This Matters for Women Managing Diabetes and Blood Pressure
If you’re dealing with both weight and blood-sugar or pressure issues, undiagnosed hypothyroidism can sabotage every effort. It slows glucose uptake and stiffens arteries. Checking your thyroid early prevents the cycle of failed diets that so many in their late 40s and early 50s experience. Start with morning temperature tracking for seven days and request the full thyroid panel I listed. The data often explains why previous plans failed and opens the door to real, lasting change.