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Metabolic Syndrome Treatment in Michigan

Metabolic Health · Michigan Weight Loss Institute

Metabolic Syndrome Is a Warning Sign Your Body Is Out of Balance.

This common cluster of risk factors together raises the risk of diabetes, heart disease, and stroke. At Michigan Weight Loss Institute, our metabolic syndrome treatment targets the insulin resistance and excess weight at its core, helping patients restore healthy balance.

Understanding the Condition

What Is Metabolic Syndrome?

Metabolic syndrome is not a single disease. Instead, it is a group of risk factors that tend to appear together, including a large waistline, high blood pressure, high blood sugar, high triglycerides, and low HDL cholesterol.

In fact, when three or more of these markers are present, a person is said to have metabolic syndrome. Moreover, insulin resistance and excess abdominal fat sit at the center of the problem, which is why metabolic syndrome treatment focuses on the metabolism as a whole.

The good news is that metabolic syndrome can often be improved or reversed. Therefore, with the right plan, you can lower your risk well before serious disease develops. Effective metabolic syndrome treatment in Michigan starts by understanding your full metabolic picture.

Key point: According to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, metabolic syndrome significantly raises the risk of heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes, yet it often responds well to weight and lifestyle changes.

Recognize the Signs

The Five Markers of Metabolic Syndrome

Specifically, metabolic syndrome is diagnosed using five measurable markers. As a result, having three or more generally means the condition is present.

  • Large waist circumference
  • High blood pressure
  • Elevated fasting blood sugar
  • High triglycerides
  • Low HDL (good) cholesterol
  • Weight gain around the abdomen
Please note: The condition itself often causes no symptoms. Because it is diagnosed by measurements and lab work, many people do not know they have it until they are screened.

Root Causes

What Causes Metabolic Syndrome?

Typically, metabolic syndrome develops from several factors working together. Importantly, none of them are a personal failing.

Insulin Resistance

Above all, it is the central driver that links the markers of metabolic syndrome.

Excess Abdominal Fat

In addition, fat around the organs strongly affects blood sugar and cholesterol.

Sedentary Lifestyle

Likewise, inactivity worsens insulin resistance and weight gain.

Family History

Genetics and family history raise your metabolic risk.

Poor Sleep

Meanwhile, short or broken sleep disrupts blood sugar and appetite hormones.

Chronic Stress

Similarly, ongoing stress raises cortisol, which works against metabolic health.

Aging

Over time, risk rises gradually with age as metabolism shifts.

Hormonal Changes

Changes such as menopause can reduce insulin sensitivity.

Why It Matters

Health Risks Associated with Metabolic Syndrome

This condition is a powerful warning sign. However, when left unaddressed, it raises the risk of several serious conditions, but treating it early can change your trajectory.

Type 2 Diabetes

It sharply raises the risk of developing diabetes.

Heart Disease

Together, the combined risk factors strain the heart and blood vessels.

Stroke

As a result, vascular damage from these factors increases stroke risk.

Fatty Liver Disease

This condition is closely tied to MASLD. Learn more.

Insulin Resistance

Indeed, it is the underlying driver that worsens over time if untreated.

PCOS

PCOS and metabolic syndrome frequently occur together in women.

Sleep Apnea

Excess weight and metabolic strain often accompany sleep apnea.

Kidney Disease

Finally, high blood pressure and blood sugar can affect the kidneys.

Related conditions: Insulin Resistance, Prediabetes, Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, PCOS, and Fatty Liver Disease (MASLD). Dedicated pages for these are part of our growing Conditions We Treat resource center.

Our Approach

How Michigan Weight Loss Institute Treats Metabolic Syndrome

Our metabolic syndrome treatment is physician-led and built around your biology. Specifically, we target the insulin resistance and excess weight that connect the markers, through our medical weight loss program.

1

Comprehensive Metabolic Evaluation

We review your labs, blood pressure, waist, and history to map your risk.

2

Nutrition Counseling

Our nutrition counseling helps improve blood sugar, triglycerides, and weight.

3

Medical Weight Management

Notably, losing excess weight can improve every marker of metabolic syndrome.

4

Lifestyle Modification

We address sleep, stress, and daily habits that influence your metabolism.

5

Physical Activity Planning

In addition, movement helps muscles use sugar and improves insulin sensitivity.

6

GLP-1 and GIP Therapies

When appropriate, GLP-1 and GIP medications can improve metabolic health.

7

Prescription Medications

Other weight loss medications may support your plan when clinically appropriate.

8

Long-Term Monitoring

We track your markers over time and adjust your plan, coordinating with your physicians.

Why Patients Choose Us

Why Choose Michigan Weight Loss Institute?

Board-Certified Expertise

Dr. Rita Kathawa is double board-certified in Internal Medicine and Obesity Medicine.

Comprehensive Metabolic Evaluation

We treat the whole cluster of risk factors, not one in isolation.

Personalized Treatment Plans

Every plan is built around your biology, history, and goals.

Long-Term Prevention Focus

We work to prevent diabetes and heart disease and protect lasting wellness.

Metabolic syndrome treatment in Michigan with Dr. Rita Kathawa, board-certified obesity medicine specialist at Michigan Weight Loss Institute

Meet Dr. Rita Kathawa

As founder of Michigan Weight Loss Institute, Dr. Kathawa is double board-certified in Internal Medicine and Obesity Medicine. She leads each patient’s metabolic care with an evidence-based, prevention-focused approach. Learn more about Dr. Kathawa.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is metabolic syndrome?

It is a cluster of risk factors, including a large waistline, high blood pressure, high blood sugar, high triglycerides, and low HDL cholesterol. When three or more are present, the condition is diagnosed.

How is metabolic syndrome diagnosed?

It is diagnosed by measuring waist circumference, blood pressure, and blood work for glucose, triglycerides, and HDL cholesterol. Three or more abnormal markers confirm the diagnosis.

Can metabolic syndrome be reversed?

In many cases, yes. For example, weight loss, nutrition, activity, and medication when needed can improve or reverse the markers and lower your long-term risk.

What causes metabolic syndrome?

Primarily, insulin resistance and excess abdominal fat are central drivers. In addition, inactivity, genetics, poor sleep, and stress work together over time.

Does metabolic syndrome raise diabetes risk?

Yes. In fact, metabolic syndrome significantly increases the risk of type 2 diabetes, as well as heart disease and stroke, which is why early treatment matters.

Can weight loss help metabolic syndrome?

Absolutely. Losing excess weight, especially around the abdomen, can improve every marker of metabolic syndrome and meaningfully lower your risk.

Do GLP-1 medications help metabolic syndrome?

GLP-1 and GIP medications can improve blood sugar and support weight loss, which improves the markers of metabolic syndrome. A physician determines whether they fit your plan.

Is metabolic syndrome the same as diabetes?

No. It is a set of risk factors that raises the risk of diabetes. Many people have metabolic syndrome before blood sugar reaches the diabetic range.

Take Control of Your Metabolic Health

If you have several risk factors such as belly weight, high blood pressure, or elevated blood sugar, Michigan Weight Loss Institute can help identify the underlying causes and develop a personalized treatment plan.

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