metabolicwellness

Curcumin for Metabolism (new study!)

What you need to know ⬇️


Curcumin is the biologically active compound in turmeric (the yellow spice used in curry).


It’s a polyphenol known for its beneficial effects on metabolic health—including blood sugar, insulin, inflammation, and weight.


But curcumin is not well absorbed from the digestive tract, so there have always been questions about its bioavailability and whether it’s worth taking.


A new research review (PMID 39062953) reveals that curcumin may not need to be well absorbed to still have metabolic effects 🙌


The reason is because curcumin acts directly in the gut to shift the gut microbiota in favor of beneficial bacterial strains, like Bifidobacteri, Lactobacilli, and butyrate-producing bacteria.


👉 This shift in gut microbiomes translates into a cascade of events that influences metabolic health.


The thing about natural compounds is that they always have multiple effects on many pathways in the human body. This is what makes them more challenging to study and to explain but so powerful for our health.


If you want to explore ways to add more turmeric into your diet, you can try out:

🫚 Golden Milk (warm milk with turmeric and spices)

🫚 Yellow Rice (add a dash of turmeric while cooking)

🫚 Scrambled Eggs or Tofu (mix turmeric in when cooking)

🫚 Smoothies (sprinkle into your smoothie)


Do you have a favorite way to use turmeric? Let me know in the comments.


Servida S, Piontini A, Gori F, et al. Curcumin and Gut Microbiota: A Narrative Overview with Focus on Glycemic Control. Int J Mol Sci. 2024;25(14):7710. [link]

Stress & Sugar: Which Comes First?

Which comes first?

When you’re stressed, your body produces cortisol and adrenaline. These increase glucose in the blood as a source of energy for your cells to respond to the perceived threat (fight or flight!) 😱

BUT…when you aren’t actually running from a saber-toothed tiger, that spike in blood sugar is kinda…EXTRA.

✖️ That’s how stress can be a driving force behind insulin resistance and blood sugar problems over time.

Now let’s look at the other way around 🔁

When you eat an excess of sugar or refined carbs, you get a sugar spike followed by a crash—which your body perceives as a stress and releases cortisol and adrenaline.

✖️ That’s how sugar causes stress.

So, which do you think comes first for you?

Is it the sugar or the stress?

Sugar Crash—Explained 😮

👀 Pause the scroll and spend a minute with me…

Ready for a crash course in exactly what happens at the cellular level when you eat too much sugar at once?

(let’s say—a big gulp slushie 🥤)

When the sugar hits your digestive tract, it’s absorbed into your bloodstream as glucose (aka blood sugar)...

…which signals beta cells in your pancreas to release insulin (a hormone) into the blood as well.

⚠️ Remember this: because we’re dealing with a slushie here, a large spike in blood sugar triggers a large spike in insulin.

Insulin facilitates the movement of glucose into cells so it can be used as energy 👏👏

Sounds great EXCEPT…

Because of the sudden nature and magnitude of the sugar spike and insulin spike, glucose is quickly moved into cells and blood sugar drops dramatically (the CRASH 🫨)

Cue hunger, cravings, shakiness, brain fog, anxiety, you-name-it.

👉 The point is that our bodies were not made to deal with excessive sugar intake.

If repeated day in and day out, eating high amounts of sugar or refined carbs without healthy fats, fiber, and protein…

…is the main cause of insulin resistance.

If you’re still with me, like ❤️this post and follow 🚶‍♀️for my upcoming posts on how to keep a healthy blood sugar balance.