Fat Science
Fat Science
Dr Emily Cooper
Normal Weight Abnormal Metabolism: Why Your Scale Doesn't Tell the Whole Story
31 minutes Posted Jun 15, 2026 at 8:00 am.
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Show notes

Could you have metabolic dysfunction even at a normal weight?

This episode challenges everything we've been taught about weight and health. Dr. Cooper reveals that up to 25% of normal-weight people have metabolic syndrome, yet they're rarely screened because doctors assume they're healthy based on appearance alone.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Weight and metabolic health are not the same thing - you can be metabolically unhealthy at any size

  • Normal weight people with metabolic dysfunction are often overlooked and undertreated by healthcare providers

  • Key screening tests include fasting glucose, insulin, HbA1c, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, blood pressure, and inflammatory markers like HSCRP

  • Metabolic dysfunction can start in your 20s and take decades to develop into serious disease

  • Both normal weight and higher weight patients face bias - normal weight people aren't screened enough, while higher weight people have everything blamed on their weight

  • Early screening and treatment can prevent catastrophic health outcomes later in life

  • The liver plays a crucial role in metabolism and can become insulin resistant regardless of body weight

NOTABLE QUOTE

"You cannot tell anything about someone's health from their outside, what they look like or what, even what they're doing necessarily, but definitely not their body size. So you can be healthy or unhealthy at any size body, and I think that's what's overlooked quite a bit." — 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

Appendix: Key References

Primary literature supporting this episode

•       Wang et al. Prevalence of Metabolically Unhealthy Normal Weight and Its Influence on the Risk of Diabetes. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2023.

•       Review: Beyond BMI — Rethinking Obesity Metrics and Cardiovascular Risk in the Era of Precision Medicine. Journal of Clinical Medicine, December 2025.

•       Korean meta-analyses on metabolic dysfunction phenotypes and cardiometabolic risk, Cardiovascular and Metabolic Sciences Journal review, 2024.

•       Frontiers in Nutrition, January 2026. Associations of metabolic heterogeneity with the progression of cardiometabolic multimorbidity.

•       International Journal of Obesity, September 2025. Cardiovascular risk factors associated with metabolic health phenotypes.

Mechanism references

•       MASLD — metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease — nomenclature and clinical framework. AASLD/EASL consensus, 2023.

•       Insulin signaling, adipose tissue dysfunction, and ectopic fat deposition — reviews on the upstream-downstream relationship.

•       Epicardial adipose tissue and cardiovascular dysfunction — Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, January 2026.

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

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