Published: June 14, 2021, 4 a.m.
Welcome to another episode of the Fertility Confidence podcast. I am your host, Dr. Kelsey Duncan, naturopathic doctor, and the founder and creator of the Fertility Confidence method.\xa0
In today\u2019s episode, we are talking about Insulin, the overlooked and under-discussed hormone that does, in fact, have an impact on our fertility.\xa0
This is part one of this conversation focusing strongly on Insulin resistance, what it is, how and why it develops and which options we have to test and address. So please do join us again next week for a deeper discussion into what we can do post-testing for Insulin resistance.
Here are the main topics of today\u2019s episode:
- What is Insulin?
- Insulin resistance - is anybody home?\xa0
- How and why insulin resistance develops?
- PCOS and Insulin resistance
- Test, don\u2019t guess
My sincerest thanks for pressing play today. Join our growing community of strong, hopeful women, each on their own fertility confidence journey; as well as those that are listening to gain the knowledge and understanding needed to support them via the Fertility Confidence Instagram @fertilityconfidencemethod or through our Facebook group Be Hormonally Confident with Dr.Kelsey.\xa0
If you could do me the honor of hitting the subscribe button, leaving a review, and sharing the podcast with a friend that needs to hear these conversations, I would be forever grateful.
Curious about how you can work with me and my team? Book your free clarity call here.\xa0
Quotes - \u201cInsulin is produced in the pancreas in response to glucose entering the bloodstream. It's like the cellular gatekeeper, to use glucose as fuel.
- \u201cInsulin is not bad, it has to be there. What makes insulin a potential issue is when insulin resistance starts to develop\u201d
- \u201cWhat happens when insulin resistance starts to develop? It's almost as if glucose is knocking and knocking and knocking on the door. And after that 10th annoying knock, insulin is just going to stop answering. That cell is now resistant to that signal. It's no longer listening to the way that it should.\u201d
- \u201cIt's pretty common for women with PCOS to also be insulin resistant but it\u2019s not a diagnostic requirement ... meaning not all women with PCOS have insulin resistance and not all women with insulin resistance have PCOS\u201d
- \u201cIf you've been told you have PCOS, but nobody has properly assessed for insulin resistance, please, please do. You may be missing a huge piece to treatment, especially fertility treatment.\u201d
- \u201cOne of the biggest impacts insulin resistance can have is on ovulation, elevated levels of insulin in the bloodstream. Around the ovary, it can impact follicle, maturation and increase ovarian production of testosterone and higher levels of androgens around the ovary.\u201d
- \u201cHigh levels of insulin impact the maturation of the placenta, the health of the placenta, which is crucial in that first trimester of pregnancy.\u201d
- \u201cInsulin resistance inflammation is a physical body stress and can cause hormonal disruption.\u201d\xa0
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