Fat Science Podcast Por Dr Emily Cooper arte de portada

Fat Science

Fat Science

De: Dr Emily Cooper
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Fat Science is a podcast on a mission to explain where our fat really comes from and why it won’t go (and stay!) away. In each episode, we share little-known facts and personal experiences to dispel misconceptions, reduce stigma, and instill hope. Fat Science is committed to creating a world where people are empowered with accurate information about metabolism and recognize that fat isn’t a failure. This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional medical advice.Dr Emily Cooper Enfermedades Físicas Higiene y Vida Saludable
Episodios
  • Navigating the GLP-1 Wild West: A Conversation With Dr. Vin Gupta
    Apr 6 2026

    Are you getting a GLP-1 prescription from someone who's never examined you?

    Dr. Vin Gupta, pulmonologist and former Chief Medical Officer at Amazon, joins Dr. Cooper to expose the dangerous gap between legitimate obesity medicine and the unregulated direct-to-consumer market. This conversation reveals why proper medical evaluation matters and how profit-driven platforms are exploiting desperate patients.

    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    • GLP-1 medications require individualized medical evaluation, not one-size-fits-all prescribing
    • Direct-to-consumer microdosing platforms lack FDA approval and proper medical oversight
    • The erosion of trust in healthcare has created opportunities for unregulated treatments
    • Comprehensive metabolic care includes regular lab work, body composition monitoring, and personalized treatment plans
    • Technology should enhance medical care, not replace proper physician evaluation

    NOTABLE QUOTE

    "I see so many people that come in, you know, they're obsessed with monitoring their HRV, their heart rate variability, and yet they had no idea they have pre-diabetes and they had no idea that they have triglyceride levels through the roof." — Dr. Emily Cooper

    GUEST BIO

    Dr. Vin Gupta is a pulmonologist, public health expert, and medical analyst for NBC News. He served as Chief Medical Officer at Amazon and has dedicated his career to translating complex science into actionable health insights at both individual and population levels.

    GLOSSARY

    GLP-1 medications: Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists, medications that help regulate blood sugar and appetite, including brand names like Ozempic, Wegovy, and Zepbound

    Microdosing: Taking smaller amounts of medication than officially prescribed or approved

    Direct-to-consumer (D2C): Healthcare services that bypass traditional medical settings, often delivered through apps or online platforms

    HRV: Heart rate variability, a measurement of the variation in time between heartbeats

    Pre-diabetes: Blood sugar levels that are higher than normal but not high enough to be diagnosed as type 2 diabetes

    Links & Resources

    • Podcast Home: fatsciencepodcast.com

    • Cooper Center for Metabolism: coopermetabolic.com

    • Resources from Dr. Cooper: coopermetabolic.com/resources

    • Join Our Community: patreon.com/cw/FatSciencePodcast

    • Submit Your Question: questions@fatsciencepodcast.com or dr.c@fatsciencepodcast.com

    Fat Science is supported by the Diabesity Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing access to effective, science-based metabolic care.

    Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Please consult with a qualified healthcare provider for personalized recommendations.

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    1 h y 2 m
  • What Happens to Your Body When You Stop Taking GLP-1s
    Mar 30 2026

    What really happens when you stop GLP-1 medications — and are the headlines telling you the whole story? The answer is more nuanced than social media wants you to believe.

    This week on Fat Science, Dr. Emily Cooper, Mark Wright, and Andrea Taylor break down four recent studies on GLP-1 treatment outcomes, weight regain, and a groundbreaking new drug that could preserve lean mass during treatment. They walk through the methodology behind each paper, explain why two studies asking the same question got opposite answers, and reveal what a new monoclonal antibody called bimagrumab could mean for the future of metabolic treatment.

    Key Takeaways

    • When you stop treating any chronic metabolic condition, the condition returns — that's not failure, that's biology.

    • Real-world data showed 56% of people who stopped filling GLP-1 prescriptions maintained or continued losing weight — likely because they continued working with their clinician on alternative treatments.

    • A new monoclonal antibody called bimagrumab showed 11% body weight reduction on its own, while simultaneously increasing lean mass by 3% — without affecting appetite.

    • When combined with semaglutide, bimagrumab reduced lean mass loss from 28% to just 11% of total weight lost.

    • Not eating enough while on GLP-1s drives greater lean mass loss — nutrition is still the best tool for preserving muscle.

    Notable Quote

    "It wasn't my failure and it was disease underneath everything. Finding that out — that it wasn't my fault — that was the miracle of the whole process to me." — Andrea Taylor

    Links & Resources

    • Podcast Home: fatsciencepodcast.com

    • Cooper Center for Metabolism: coopermetabolic.com

    • Resources from Dr. Cooper: coopermetabolic.com/resources

    • Join Our Community: patreon.com/cw/FatSciencePodcast

    • Submit Your Question: questions@fatsciencepodcast.com or dr.c@fatsciencepodcast.com

    Fat Science is supported by the Diabesity Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing access to effective, science-based metabolic care.

    Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Please consult with a qualified healthcare provider for personalized recommendations





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    47 m
  • Mailbag: Fasting, Food Noise & GLP-1s
    Mar 23 2026

    Ever wonder why fasting worked at first — then stopped? Or why you lost 80 pounds only to gain back 100?

    In this mailbag episode, Dr. Emily Cooper, Mark Wright, and Andrea Taylor tackle the most misunderstood topics in metabolic health. From the harsh reality of fasting culture to the surprising metabolic challenges faced by normal-weight individuals, this conversation validates what you've been experiencing and explains the science behind it. You'll also hear why GLP-1 medications aren't just weight loss drugs, why your body might be fighting you even when you're doing everything right, and what happens when your job — like shift work or firefighting — disrupts your metabolism for years.

    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    • You can have metabolic dysfunction at a normal weight with what appear to be normal labs, for example, when insulin is over suppressed from chronic under-fueling or overexercising
    • Fasting triggers the same biological adaptation as any restrictive diet and typically results in weight regain that's 22 percent higher than starting weight
    • Food noise is biological, not psychological, and stems from an imbalance of hormones and neurotransmitters signaling nutritional insecurity
    • GLP-1 medications may improve immune function because metabolic health and immunity are deeply connected
    • Shift work and chronic sleep disruption can cause real metabolic damage by weakening leptin signals, increasing insulin resistance, and amplifying hunger hormones

    NOTABLE QUOTE

    "You can't trick your body. You have to have that foundational fueling in there." — Dr. Emily Cooper

    Links & Resources

    Podcast Home: fatsciencepodcast.com

    Cooper Center for Metabolism: coopermetabolic.com

    Resources from Dr. Cooper: coopermetabolic.com/resources

    Join Our Community: patreon.com/cw/FatSciencePodcast

    Submit Your Question: questions@fatsciencepodcast.com or dr.c@fatsciencepodcast.com

    Fat Science is supported by the Diabesity Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing access to effective, science-based metabolic care.

    Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Please consult with a qualified healthcare provider for personalized recommendations.

    Más Menos
    45 m
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