I hear and see a lot of mention of weight gain as a side effect of some medications. I believe it happens but I’ve never understood how it works. For example, could an athlete who eats perfectly still be struck by weight gain as a side effect? What’s the biological mechanism that would make weight gain happen in a person with a healthy balanced diet?
I’ve taken a medication for years that a doctor just told me they’d rather never raise the dose on because it can cause metabolic syndrome. My A1C, cholesterol, and virtually the rest of my labs were in the healthy range, but I have noticed some weight on me that seemed oddly persistent. My diet ranges from average to healthy nowadays and I’m moderately active. Yet I can think back to a time before the medication when I was eating horribly, never exercised, smoked and drank nonstop, and my labs were looking nasty – yet my extremely consistent max weight was a solid 20lbs under what it is today which a noticeably better lifestyle all around. I’m by no means the athlete in the perfect diet example, I’m more fascinated by how something like that is even possible. Definitely interesting.
In: Biology
Prednisone. I’ve been on it for years and don’t know if I will ever be rid of it. It has caused all sorts of problems but weight gain is the one I’m currently struggling with. It is a specific sort of weight gain. You can see it in a persons face, belly, upper back. “Hey, that person looks like they are on prednisone”. Yep, I’m prednisone fat.
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