The Health Pulse

Episode 101 | Insulin Resistance Explained

Quick Lab Mobile Episode 101

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Chronic disease is often treated like a collection of separate problems—heart disease, diabetes, fatty liver—each managed in isolation. But what if they all share the same root? In this episode of The Health Pulse, we explore a unifying framework: insulin resistance as the upstream driver of multiple chronic conditions.

We break down what’s happening at the cellular level when muscle and liver cells become overloaded with energy, leading them to “turn down” insulin signaling as a protective mechanism. This triggers hyperinsulinemia, where the pancreas compensates by producing more insulin—sometimes for years before blood sugar rises.

From there, we connect the metabolic cascade: glycogen overflow, de novo lipogenesis, fat-cell expansion, inflammation, and free fatty acid spillover, all feeding into fatty liver and selective hepatic insulin resistance—a state where the liver produces both glucose and fat simultaneously.

We also tie insulin resistance to cardiovascular risk, explaining how it drives VLDL overproduction, small dense LDL formation, and why ApoB is often a more meaningful marker than standard LDL cholesterol. Along the way, we challenge the limits of the traditional “calories in, calories out” model when insulin remains chronically elevated.

Finally, we focus on early detection, highlighting overlooked but powerful markers like fasting insulin, triglyceride-to-HDL ratio, ALT/AST trends, and ApoB—giving you a clearer picture of metabolic health long before disease is diagnosed.

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Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be considered medical advice. The content discussed is based on research, expert insights, and reputable sources, but it does not replace professional medical consultation, diagnosis, or treatment. We strive to present accurate and up-to-date information, medical research is constantly evolving. Listeners should always verify details with trusted health organizations, before making any health-related decisions. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, such as severe pain, difficulty breathing, or other urgent symptoms, call your local emergency services immediately. By listening to this podcast, you acknowledge that The Health Pulse and its creators are not responsible for any actions taken based on the content of this episode. Your health and well-being should always be guided by the advice of qualified medical professionals.

The One Root Cause Idea

Nicolette

Welcome to the Health Pulse, your go-to source for quick, actionable insights on health, wellness, and diagnostics. Whether you're looking to optimize your well-being or stay informed about the latest in-medical testing, we've got you covered. Join us as we break down key health topics in just minutes. Let's dive in.

Rachel

You know, um, usually when we think about chronic disease, we tend to picture these completely isolated, separate systems breaking down. I mean, we treat the human body like uh like a house undergoing renovations, right?

Mark

Oh, absolutely. With uh a bunch of contractors who just completely refuse to speak to one another.

Rachel

Aaron Ross Powell Right. Exactly. Like heart disease. Well, that's a plumbing issue in the arteries, so you know, call the plumber.

Mark

Right.

Rachel

And type two diabetes. Well, that's an electrical problem with your blood sugar, get the electrician.

Mark

Yeah. Totally a separate box.

Rachel

Aaron Powell And then there's obesity, which society constantly tells us is just this structural problem. Like it's just a simple math equation of calories in versus calories out.

Mark

Which is well, we'll get into that, but it's incredibly flawed.

Rachel

Yeah, it really is. We put all these conditions into these neat, entirely separate little boxes. But today we are um we're tearing down the drywall to look at the wiring because we're exploring this massive paradigm-shifting concept in medicine that affects almost everyone, yet it just, you know, it flies largely under the radar.

Mark

It really is a massive shift in perspective. And frankly, a completely necessary one. We are essentially asking the medical community a very uncomfortable question.

Rachel

Yeah.

Mark

Like, what if we've been looking at the entire landscape of modern chronic disease completely backwards for the last 50 years?

Rachel

Right. What if these aren't separate, isolated contractors at all? What if heart disease, diabetes, fatty liver, and obesity are just different downstream symptoms of the exact same underlying breakdown?

Mark

Aaron Ross Powell That is the core question.

Rachel

Which brings us to today's deep dive. Welcome in, everyone. It is Tuesday, April 28th, 2026, and we are unpacking a really fascinating new article published today by Quick Lab Mobile. The title kind of says it all. It's called Is Insulin Resistance the Root Cause of Most Chronic Disease?

Mark

Aaron Powell And you know, the evidence they compile to answer that question with a resounding yes is pretty staggering.

Rachel

It really is. Now, really quick, before we get into the heavy cellular mechanics of all this, a quick reminder. This deep dive is strictly for educational and informational purposes only.

Mark

Right, not medical advice.

Rachel

Exactly. It's not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. You know, tuning in doesn't create a doctor-patient relationship. So please always consult your actual physician before making any medical decisions.

Mark

Always a good disclaimer to have out of the way.

The Cellular Traffic Jam

Rachel

Definitely. Okay, let's unpack this. We need to start at the absolute foundation. Since you and I, and obviously our listeners, already know that insulin's primary job is to uh to shuttle glucose from the bloodstream into the cells for energy. Let's look at the actual physical pathology of the resistance.

Mark

Yeah. What's actually happening at the cellular level?

Rachel

Right. The source material paints a picture that is less about a quote unquote broken lock on a door and a lot more about an intracellular traffic jam, one caused by um ectopic lipid accumulation.

Mark

Aaron Powell And that's a crucial distinction. We often hear that in insulin resistance, the cell's receptors are just, you know, broken, like a key that won't turn. Right. But biology is rarely that clumsy. What the research actually shows is an active protective downregulation.

Rachel

Aaron Powell Protect Wait, so the cell is doing it on purpose?

Mark

Yes, exactly. When a cell says a muscle cell becomes completely stuffed with excess energy, specifically it starts accumulating these toxic lipid byproducts, things like diacylglycerols and ceramides. Oh wow. Yeah, it enters a state of deep metabolic distress. To protect itself from taking on even more fuel that it literally can't burn, it intentionally blunts its own insulin receptors.

Rachel

So it's basically ignoring the insulin.

Mark

Right. The signal from insulin stops getting through clearly because the cell is essentially putting its hands over its ears.

Rachel

Aaron Powell That makes so much sense. It's like um it's like an airport baggage claim. The carousel, which is your bloodstream, is completely overflowing with bags, which would be the glucose.

Mark

Love this analogy.

Rachel

Right. But instead of shutting off the conveyor belt, the body just sends out 50 more baggage handlers, the insulin, to aggressively shove these bags into lockers that are already just bursting at the hinges.

Mark

That is exactly what's happening.

Rachel

Which brings me to a major misconception. I need to push back on this idea that blood sugar issues start with a lack of insulin. Because early on, the pancreas is actually flooding the system with it, right? Why does the pancreas overreact so aggressively?

Mark

What's fascinating here is the body's compensation mechanism. It really reveals what the body truly perceives as the immediate threat.

Rachel

Which is the blood sugar.

Mark

Yes. High blood glucose is acutely toxic. I mean, it damages blood vessels, it damages nerves. The body senses this rising glucose because the cells are refusing to take it in, and the pancreas basically panics.

Rachel

Oh, it just sends out more handlers.

Mark

Exactly. It pumps out even more insulin. It prioritizes clearing the toxic glucose from the blood at absolutely all costs, which results in the state of hyperinsulinemia.

Rachel

Which means your basal insulin levels are just chronically high all the time.

Mark

Precisely. And for a long time, maybe a decade or more, even this brute force tactic actually works.

Rachel

Wow, a decade.

Mark

Yeah. The extra insulin manages to shove enough glucose into the resistant cells to keep your blood sugar levels looking perfectly normal on a standard lab test.

Rachel

But there's a cost to that, obviously.

Mark

A huge cost. Your entire metabolic system is now running in constant overdrive, absolutely flooded with the growth hormone.

Rachel

Okay, so if the muscle cells are stuffed and they're actively resisting the baggage handlers, where does all this excess energy actually go?

Mark

That's the domino effect.

Rachel

Right. Because the article points out this kicks off a very specific stomach cascade, starting with our storage tanks.

Mark

Aaron Powell Yeah, and human physiology has a strict hierarchy for storing energy. First, the body tries to store the extra glucose as glycogen.

Rachel

In the muscles and liver, right?

Mark

Correct. But our glycogen storage tanks have very strict limited capacities. An average adult liver can only store about um maybe a hundred grams of glycogen.

Rachel

Aaron Powell That is not a lot at all.

Mark

It's not. So once those tanks are full, the body has to convert the excess energy into fat through a process called de novolipogenesis.

Rachel

And initially it stores that fat where it belongs, right? In the subcutaneous adipose tissue, you know, the fat just under the skin.

Mark

Right. That's the safe storage depot.

Rachel

But adipose tissue isn't an infinite black hole.

Mark

Not at all. Healthy fat expansion happens through a process called hyperplasia. That's where the body creates new healthy fat cells to store the surplus energy.

Rachel

Okay.

Mark

But eventually people reach their personal fat threshold. They literally can't make new cells fast enough, so the existing fat cells just get bigger and bigger.

Rachel

And that's called hypertrophy, right?

Mark

Exactly. Right? And when they stretch beyond their biological limits, they become hypoxic.

Rachel

Hypoxic? Like they can't breathe.

Mark

Literally. They don't have enough oxygen to survive their new massive size, and so they begin to die.

Rachel

Oh man. And when fat cells start dying off, that sounds like a massive alarm bell for the immune system.

Mark

It is a huge alarm bell. The dying cells send out these distress signals, calling in immune cells like macrophages to clean up the mess.

Rachel

Wow.

Mark

Yeah, this turns your fat tissue from a quiet passive energy reserve into an active war zone. It becomes highly pro-inflammatory.

Rachel

So it's just spewing out inflammation.

Mark

Yes. Secreting inflammatory cytokines throughout your entire body. And it gets worse. Those bursting, overwhelmed fat cells start leaking non-asterified or free fatty acids, directly back into your blood circulation.

Rachel

Which means we now have toxic fat just floating around the blood looking for a place to park.

Mark

Exactly.

Rachel

And the article says a lot of it parks right in the liver. Now here's where it gets really interesting. The text outlines this completely bizarre mismatch in the liver once it gets overloaded with this ectopic fat.

The Liver’s Selective Insulin Resistance

Mark

Yeah, the liver gets deeply confused.

Rachel

Right. So the liver becomes insulin resistant, meaning it completely ignores the signal to stop making glucose. It just keeps churning out sugar. Yep. But simultaneously, it remains perfectly sensitive to insulin's command to create fat lipogenesis. How is that even possible? How can the liver be completely deaf to one command, but perfectly obedient to the other?

Mark

You've hit on a phenomenon called selective hepatic insulin resistance, and it really is the crux of the metabolic traffic jam.

Rachel

Selective resistance. Okay.

Mark

Yeah. Insulin signaling in the liver operates through two completely distinct pathways. The pathway responsible for turning off gluconeogenesis, you know, the creation of new sugar, that one gets blocked by the accumulation of those ectopic fats we just mentioned.

Rachel

So the liver thinks you're starving.

Mark

Exactly. It thinks you're starving and just keeps pumping sugar into the blood. But the other pathway, the one that activates SREBP1C, which is this master regulator that drives fat creation, that pathway stays wide open.

Rachel

That is wild. It's like a total evolutionary glitch.

Mark

It really is. The liver is trapped in this loop where it is overproducing both glucose and fat simultaneously. It's flooding a system that is already drowning in energy.

Rachel

Okay, so let's track the fallout of this systemic biological stress. We have this massive energy overflow. The liver is drowning in fat and making too much sugar. The fat cells are leaking toxic fatty acids and creating a systemic inflammatory war zone.

Mark

A perfect storm.

Heart Disease From Particle Overload

Rachel

Right. And because this is systemic, it doesn't just hit one organ. Depending on where the damage happens to be most visible, it masquerades as entirely different diseases. So let's start connecting the dots, beginning with the cardiovascular risk. Because if fat cells are leaking toxic free fatty acids, that directly explains the heart disease connection, right? Right. How does that alter the way the liver packages lipids?

Mark

Well, it changes everything about the lipid profile. Remember, your liver is taking in those leaking free fatty acids plus all the fat it is actively creating itself. And it has to get rid of it somehow.

Rachel

Right.

Mark

So it packages this fat into very low density lipoproteins or VLDL particles and just ships them out into the blood. As these VLDL particles circulate, they interact with other lipoproteins, and they end up swapping their triglycerides for cholesterol.

Rachel

And this swap is what creates those small, dense LDL particles we hear so much about.

Mark

Exactly. When the VLDL offloads its triglycerides into an LDL particle, the LDL becomes structurally unstable. An enzyme comes along, sniffs off the excess, and leaves you with a small, dense, highly athergenic LDL particle.

Rachel

And athergenic means it causes plaques.

Mark

Yes. Because they are smaller, they are much more likely to penetrate the endothelial lining of your arteries. And because your whole system is highly inflamed from those distressed fat cells we talked about, your endothelium is already damaged and sticky.

Rachel

Making it incredibly easy for these particles to get trapped in the artery walls.

Mark

Priscilla.

Rachel

And this is where the article really emphasizes APOB over just looking at standard LDL cholesterol, right?

Mark

Yes. APOB is the primary structural protein found on every single one of these atherogenic particles, the VLDLs, the small dense LDLs. Insulin resistance drives up the total number of these particles.

Rachel

So more particles equals more risk?

Mark

Math-wise, yes. More particles mean a higher APOB count, which mathematically increases the probability of them crashing into your artery walls and forming plaques. So cardiovascular disease in this context isn't a plumbing issue caused by like eating an egg yolk. Right. It is directly fueled by the metabolic dysfunction of insulin resistance.

Rachel

Okay. That makes perfect sense for heart disease. Now what about type 2 diabetes? If this hyperinsulinemia is happening for years, is the eventual diabetes diagnosis just the moment the pancreas beta cells finally wave the white flag?

Mark

That is essentially it. Type 2 diabetes is a late stage manifestation. For a decade or more, the pancreas has been furiously pumping out extra insulin to overcome the cellular resistance. It's working overtime. But beta cells, the cells in the pancreas that manufacture insulin, they can only work in overdrive for so long. Eventually, they suffer from exhaustion and undergo apoptosis, which is programmed cell death.

Rachel

They literally die off from the workload.

Mark

They do. And only then, when the insulin supply finally drops, does the blood glucose spike out of control? That spike is the official diagnosis, but the disease process started years earlier.

Why CICO Fails With High Insulin

Rachel

So the diabetes diagnosis is just the moment the dam finally breaks. We already talked about fatty liver disease, which obviously makes sense since the liver becomes the overflow parking lot for the excess energy. But I need to challenge this next connection because it drives me crazy. I want to hone in on obesity.

Mark

Oh, this is a big one.

Rachel

Because this directly contradicts what a lot of registered dietitians still teach. The whole calories in, calories out, model CICO. If someone is struggling with obesity, the standard line is still largely you're eating too much and moving too little, so just have more willpower. Right. But the article suggests that if you have high insulin, your body is biologically blocking fat breakdown. So is the pure CICO model fundamentally flawed for someone with insulin resistance?

Mark

If we connect this to the bigger picture, yes. Relying purely on the thermodynamic calories in, calories out model while completely ignoring endocrinology is deeply flawed.

Rachel

Aaron Powell Right. The hormones matter.

Mark

They do. Insulin is the master storage hormone. When insulin levels are elevated, it sends a potent one-way signal to the fat cells, store energy. But more importantly, insulin actively inhibits an enzyme called hormone-sensitive lipase.

Rachel

And what exactly does hormone-sensitive lipase do?

Mark

Aaron Powell It is the essential enzyme required for lipolysis. Yeah. That's the breakdown of stored body fat so it can be used for fuel. If your basal insulin is chronically elevated because of insulin resistance, lipolysis is chemically shut off.

Rachel

Wow. Yeah.

Mark

You are hormonally locked in storage mode.

Rachel

Aaron Powell So you can cut calories all you want, but your body literally cannot access its internal battery.

Mark

Exactly. Your body senses the calorie deficit, but because insulin is blocking the release of stored fat, the brain thinks you are actively starving.

Rachel

Oh, that sounds miserable.

Mark

It is. So the body triggers compensatory mechanisms. It lowers your metabolic rate, you become colder, you become lethargic, and your hunger hormones go completely through the roof.

Rachel

So it's fighting you every step of the way.

Mark

It is incredibly difficult to lose weight when your cells are starving for energy they can't access, all while your fat tissue is locked up tight by hyperinsulinemia.

Rachel

That is staggering. I mean, it it means struggling with weight in this context is a profound hormonal and metabolic signaling issue, not a lack of willpower.

Mark

It completely changes the narrative.

Rachel

It really does. So we look at these five conditions: cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, fatty liver, obesity, and chronic inflammation. It's like looking at a tree with five different branches that all look a little sick. And instead of treating each branch separately, you realize the root is rotting.

Mark

Exactly. One root cause.

The Lab Test Blind Spot

Rachel

Which brings us to the most frustrating part of this entire deep dive. If this single mechanism is the root cause of so much disease, and if it's developing over a decade, why aren't doctors catching it years in advance during a standard annual physical?

Mark

That is the ultimate clinical blind spot of our current medical system. It really comes down to what we are measuring and what we define as normal.

Rachel

Okay, let's break that down.

Mark

Standard lab tests almost exclusively focus on fasting glucose and HBA1C, which gives us a three-month average of blood sugar.

Rachel

But because of that compensation mechanism we discussed, the pancreas flooding the system with extra insulin, the glucose looks totally fine.

Mark

Right. Blood glucose levels will stay squarely in the normal range for years, sometimes decades, while the insulin resistance is silently progressing in the background. Sneaky. Very. A normal glucose result doesn't mean you're metabolically healthy. It just means your body is successfully working overtime to hide the problem.

Rachel

I love the analogy the article uses here. Looking only at fasting glucose is like looking at a car going 60 miles per hour on the highway. Everything looks perfectly fine from the outside. Yep. But if you don't look at the tachometer, which in this case is your insulin level, to see that the engine is redlining at 8,000 RPMs just to maintain that speed, you completely miss the fact that the engine is about to blow.

Mark

It's a perfect analogy. And standard medical panels rarely, if ever, measure fasting insulin. Without knowing the insulin level, you have absolutely no idea how hard the pancreas is working.

Rachel

And to make matters worse, the early symptoms of this metabolic shift, things like fatigue, brain fog, constant hunger, struggling to lose weight, they are incredibly nonspecific.

Mark

Right. They overlap with so many other things.

Rachel

You go to the doctor and say, You're tired and can't lose weight. And what happens? You get told to sleep more, stress less, maybe take an antidepressant. They just get dismissed as lifestyle stress. So what does this all mean? We are essentially waiting for the house to be entirely engulfed in flames, which is the official type 2 diabetes or heart disease diagnosis, instead of checking the smoke detector when the fire first starts.

Mark

This raises an important question about how our clinical reference ranges are designed in the first place. Lab reference ranges are largely based on statistical averages of the population.

Rachel

Okay.

Mark

But when we know that over 80% of the adult population has some form of metabolic dysfunction, the average is definitely not optimal physiology.

Rachel

Oh wow. I never thought about it like that.

Mark

Yeah. You can have lab values that fall within the so-called normal range, but if you look at them year over year, they are trending in a direction that reflects worsening health. The medical system is fundamentally designed to diagnose and treat established late-stage disease. It is not designed to spot early functional decline.

Markers To Catch It Early

Rachel

Okay, so if the standard medical checkup fails to spot this until the house is on fire, how can you actually find out if you have insulin resistance early? I mean, if standard labs aren't going to check the smoke detectors, what should we be looking for to hack the system?

Mark

Well, if you want to catch this early, the source material gives us a very clear map of early warning markers. And the single most important early marker to demand is fasting insulin.

Rachel

The tachometer.

Mark

Exactly. As we established, this is the very first marker to rise in the cascade. If you have high fasting insulin alongside normal fasting glucose, that is the ultimate red flag of early dysfunction. It means the resistance is there and the pancreatic compensation has already begun.

Rachel

Got it. Fasting insulin, not just glucose. What's next on the map?

Mark

Next, you want to look at specific lipid patterns. Don't just look at total cholesterol. Look at the relationship between your triglycerides and your HDL, the high density lipoprotein.

Rachel

Okay, the ratio.

Mark

Right. A high triglyceride to HDL ratio is strongly associated with insulin resistance and an overloaded liver. Ideally, you want that ratio to be under 1.5 or even closer to one.

Rachel

Because the triglycerides represent the fat floating in the blood from that liver overflow we talked about, and the HDL is suppressed by the overall metabolic dysfunction.

Mark

Correct. Then you should look closely at your liver enzymes, specifically ALT and AST.

Rachel

Okay, what are we looking for there?

Mark

Often doctors won't flag these until they're significantly elevated. But even if they are technically within the normal range, if you track them over time and see them creeping upward, say an ALT moving from 15 to 35 over a few years, that can be an early clue of fat accumulating in the liver and impaired signaling.

Rachel

So the trend matters more than the snapshot.

Mark

Exactly. And finally, measuring APOB. As we discussed earlier, this gives you the total count of those dangerous atherogenic particles. You can have a perfectly normal standard LDL cholesterol number, but a dangerously high APOB particle count because insulin resistance alters the particle size.

Rachel

It's all about identifying the patterns rather than just staring at a single isolated value and saying, well, it's in the green zone, you're fine. And this is exactly what groups like Quick Lab Mobile are trying to solve. The article mentions they are offering at-home testing down in Miami, specifically focused on these exact metabolic markers, things like fasting insulin and APOB, that most general practitioners just won't order.

Mark

It's a huge step in the right direction.

Rachel

It makes so much sense. If the traditional system isn't set up to check the early warning signs, you have to take the power back, check them yourself, and track these changes over time.

Mark

And doing it early is vital because of one key word: reversible.

Rachel

Oh, that is a great word to hear.

Mark

It is. By the time you reach an established disease state, like advanced cardiovascular disease or full-blown type 2 diabetes, the tissue damage is much, much harder to undo. But early insulin resistance, when it's just a functional shift in cellular signaling, it responds incredibly well to lifestyle, dietary, and metabolic interventions.

Reversibility Plus The Fasting Question

Rachel

Which brings us to the wrap-up. If you take absolutely nothing else away from this deep dive, remember this. Normal lab results for fasting glucose do not guarantee metabolic health. If you feel constantly fatigued, if you have brain fog, or if you find yourself inexplicably struggling to lose weight despite cutting calories and hitting the gym, your body might be fighting a silent battle.

Mark

It's so true.

Rachel

Identifying these patterns early, getting your fasting insulin checked, calculating your triglyceride to HDL ratio, it allows for meaningful intervention before the structural damage is permanent.

Mark

And you know, looking at all this through the lens of a systemic energy surplus leaves us with a really interesting thought to explore moving forward.

Rachel

Oh, what's that?

Mark

If insulin resistance is fundamentally an issue of our cells being overwhelmed by a constant, unrelenting supply of energy, it makes you wonder could the timing of when we eat be the missing piece of the puzzle?

Rachel

Like fasting.

Mark

Yeah. Deliberately giving our liver and pancreas extended breaks from processing fuel, perhaps through intermittent fasting, might be just as critical as what we eat in clearing that intracellular traffic jam.

Rachel

Oh wow, that is a fascinating question to chew on. Fasting, meal timing, actually giving the baggage handlers a chance to clear the backlog before sending more bags down the carousel.

Mark

Exactly. Give them a break.

Rachel

We might need a whole separate deep dive just to explore the biology of fasting. But for now, thank you for joining us on this one. Stay curious, always look past the surface level symptoms, and remember, don't wait for the whole house to catch fire before you realize the plumbing and the electrical are connected to the exact same broken fuse box.

Nicolette

Catch you next time.quicklabmobile.com. Stay informed, stay healthy, and we'll catch you in the next episode.

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