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Barbell Medicine Podcast

Episode 379: Menopause Myths, Cortisol Belly, & The Truth About IUDs

Barbell Medicine Podcast

Barbell Medicine

Health & Fitness

4.81.2K Ratings

🗓️ 16 December 2025

⏱️ 67 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The wellness industry wants you to believe that menopause renders you fragile, fasting creates "cortisol belly," and birth control is silently destroying your skeletal health. These claims aren't just scientifically inaccurate; they act as "nocebo" barriers that scare women away from effective training and healthcare.


We brought in the heavy artillery—Dr. Lauren Colenso-Semple, Dr. Loraine Baraki, and Dr. Spencer Nadolsky—to dissect the physiology behind these viral fears. Discover why your body remains resilient through hormonal transitions and why lifestyle or GLP-1s is a false dichotomy, 


  • Dr. Colenso-Semple: @drlaurencs1
  • Dr. Loraine Baraki: @loraine_barbellmedicine
  • Dr. Spencer Nadolsky: @drnadolsky


Key Learning Points


  • The Menopause "Cliff" Myth: Menopause does not destroy your ability to recover or adapt to exercise.1 While aging may require programming adjustments, your muscles do not stop responding to tension and progressive overload simply because estrogen levels change.


  • Cortisol Fear-mongering: There is no evidence that intermittent fasting or skipping breakfast causes pathological "cortisol belly" or visceral fat storage in women. Fasting is simply a tool for Calorie restriction, not a hormonal wrecking ball.


  • IUDs & Bone Density: Levonorgestrel IUDs (hormonal) work primarily via local action on the uterus, not systemic suppression. Contrary to viral claims, they do not "eat your bones," and most users continue to ovulate and produce protective estrogen.


  • The "Masking" Fallacy: Amenorrhea (lack of period) on an IUD is a known, harmless side effect of a thinned uterine lining. It is rarely "masking" a dangerous underlying condition like premature ovarian insufficiency.


  • Birth Control & Performance: Population-level data shows that hormonal contraceptives do not clinically impair strength or athletic performance. While they increase SHBG and lower free testosterone, women are not "little men" dependent solely on testosterone for performance.


  • GLP-1 Agonists (Ozempic/Mounjaro): Using medication to treat the appetite dysregulation of obesity is not "cheating." Muscle loss on these drugs is primarily a function of the Caloric deficit, not the drug itself, and can be mitigated with resistance training.


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Clinical Pearls & Takeaways

  • Programming for Menopause: Stop treating menopause as a disability. Continue to lift heavy (RPE 6-9) and perform conditioning. If recovery lags, adjust volume (sets/reps) before blaming hormones.


  • Protein Simplified: Ignore the complex "ideal body weight" math. Aim for ~1.6g/kg of total body weight, or simply add one extra serving of protein (like a shake) to your current daily intake.


  • Medical Decisions: Do not remove an IUD or avoid birth control solely due to social media fear-mongering about bone density or "low T." These choices should be based on your contraceptive needs and symptom management (e.g., PCOS, endometriosis).


Timestamps

  • 00:00 Intro: The "Fragile Female" Narrative
  • 01:00 Does Menopause Destroy Recovery?
  • 11:00 Muscle Fiber Types: Fact vs. Fiction
  • 24:00 Fasting, "Cortisol Belly," and Visceral Fat
  • 34:00 Protein Intake: Survival vs. Optimal
  • 41:40 Dr. Lorraine Baraki: Do IUDs Cause Bone Loss?
  • 50:00 Birth Control, Acne, and Athletic Performance
  • 59:00 Dr. Spencer Nadolsky: The Truth About GLP-1s & Muscle Loss
  • 01:05:00 Final Verdict: You Are Not Fragile


References

  • Thomas, Ewan et al. “The effect of resistance training programs on lean body mass in postmenopausal and elderly women: a meta-analysis of observational studies.” Aging clinical and experimental research vol. 33,11 (2021): 2941-2952. doi:10.1007/s40520-021-01853-8 TWO
  • Roberts, Brandon M et al. “Sex Differences in Resistance Training: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.” Journal of strength and conditioning research vol. 34,5 (2020): 1448-1460. doi:10.1519/JSC.0000000000003521
  • Khalafi, Mousa et al. “The effects of exercise training on body composition in postmenopausal women: a systematic review and meta-analysis.” Frontiers in endocrinology vol. 14 1183765. 14 Jun. 2023, doi:10.3389/fendo.2023.1183765
  • Staron, R S et al. “Fiber type composition of the vastus lateralis muscle of young men and women.” The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society vol. 48,5 (2000): 623-9. doi:10.1177/002215540004800506 
  • Hunter, Sandra K. “The Relevance of Sex Differences in Performance Fatigability.” Medicine and science in sports and exercise vol. 48,11 (2016): 2247-2256. doi:10.1249/MSS.0000000000000928
  • Nuzzo, James L. “Narrative Review of Sex Differences in Muscle Strength, Endurance, Activation, Size, Fiber Type, and Strength Training Participation Rates, Preferences, Motivations, Injuries, and Neuromuscular Adaptations.” Journal of strength and conditioning research vol. 37,2 (2023): 494-536. doi:10.1519/JSC.0000000000004329
  • Verdell, J. Tyler MD; Acker, Matthew MD. Does the LNG-IUD decrease BMD in adolescent females?. Evidence-Based Practice 23(4):p 10-11, April 2020. | DOI: 10.1097/EBP.0000000000000601
  • Jäger, Ralf et al. “International Society of Sports Nutrition Position Stand: protein and exercise.” Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition vol. 14 20. 20 Jun. 2017, doi:10.1186/s12970-017-0177-8
  • Tan, Yimei et al. “Effect of GLP-1 receptor agonists on bone mineral density, bone metabolism markers, and fracture risk in type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis.” Acta diabetologica vol. 62,5 (2025): 589-606. doi:10.1007/s00592-025-02468-5





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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome back to the Barbell Medicine podcast. I'm Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum.

0:08.2

Two weeks ago, in part one, we started dissecting a five-hour viral series from the diary of a CEO

0:14.3

that racked up millions of views. We debunked cycle-syncing and the idea that Zone 2 cardio is bro-science.

0:20.0

But today, today we're getting into the really scary stuff.

0:23.5

In part two, we're tackling claims that menopause basically destroys your ability to recover,

0:28.5

that fasting somehow gives women belly fat, and perhaps most concerning, that your birth control

0:33.3

is eating your bones and ruining your athletic potential.

0:36.9

I'm joined again by Dr. Lauren

0:38.4

Kalenzhou Semple, and this time we're bringing in the heavy artillery. Dr. Lorraine Baraki

0:42.8

helps us navigate the fear-mongering around IUDs, and Dr. Spencer Nodolsky weighs in on the

0:47.2

GLP1 conversation. We watch this so you don't have to. Today, let's get started with the claim that

0:52.6

if you're a woman over 40, you're basically

0:54.4

fragile.

1:00.7

We talk about high intensity during our reproductive years. You can pretty much get away with

1:06.1

whatever you want to do during your reproductive years because you have the benefit of our

1:10.0

hormones working for

1:10.8

us. We start getting into perimenopause and we start getting into menopause. This is where we have

1:15.3

to really carefully look at volume versus intensity. So that means if we're doing lots of stuff,

1:23.4

or are we doing really purposeful, high intensity versus low intensity? Because we're trying to create what we call a polarization of the training so that when we hit high

1:34.1

intensities, we're actually hitting the intensities we need to create change.

1:38.4

But on the other side of it, we want to hit really low intensity so that we can have recovery.

1:43.8

It gets harder to recover as we get

...

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