FUNCTIONAL HEALTH GUIDE -- METABOLIC HEALTH AND INSULIN RESISTANCE

Functional Health — Metabolic Health & Insulin Resistance

A Longevity-Focused Guide for Dogs and Cats
By Dr. Kevin Toman, The Longevity Vet

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Why Weight Is a Late Marker

Weight gain is often the last visible sign of metabolic dysfunction.

Earlier changes commonly include:

  • insulin resistance

  • altered energy utilization

  • chronic inflammation

By the time weight changes are obvious, metabolic stress has often been present for some time.

This worksheet is a decision-support tool, not a diagnosis.
It is organized around The 3 Core Goals.


The 3 Core Goals

This worksheet is designed to help you:

  1. Clarify what matters most right now

  2. Determine the next best test 

  3. Choose the most appropriate next step


Core Goal 1: Clarify What Matters Most Right Now

Metabolic dysfunction rarely announces itself clearly. Functional Health focuses on patterns, not just the number on the scale.

Early Metabolic Red Flags

Patterns that deserve attention include:

  • difficulty losing weight despite diet changes

  • increased hunger or food-seeking behavior

  • low or inconsistent energy

  • abdominal fat gain

  • abnormal triglycerides or lipid trends

Individually, these signs may seem mild. Together, they often reflect insulin resistance and inflammatory stress.

Functional Health Perspective

The key question is not:

“Is my pet overweight?”

It is:

“Is my pet’s metabolism functioning efficiently?”


Core Goal 2: Determine the Next Best Test 

Not every pet with weight concerns needs immediate testing.

Functional Health helps clarify:

  • when observation and lifestyle changes are reasonable

  • when targeted testing adds meaningful insight

  • which markers best reflect metabolic stress

When testing is appropriate, emphasis is placed on trend-aware, purpose-driven evaluation, not broad panels by default.


Core Goal 3: Choose the Most Appropriate Next Step

Once metabolic stress is identified, interventions should be prioritized and staged.

First-Line Functional Health Interventions

  • dietary composition adjustments

  • meal timing strategies

  • improving movement quality, not just quantity

These steps often yield meaningful improvement when applied consistently.

Advanced Interventions (When Appropriate)

  • insulin-sensitizing strategies

  • prescription longevity medications

These options are most effective when used intentionally and with oversight, not as standalone fixes.


Why Metabolic Health Matters for Longevity

Metabolic health directly influences:

  • cancer risk

  • arthritis progression

  • cognitive aging

  • lifespan itself

This is one of the areas where longevity medicine has outsized impact when addressed early.


When to Escalate Beyond the Worksheet

A PET LONGEVITY CONSULT is appropriate when:

  • weight loss stalls despite appropriate changes

  • lab trends suggest metabolic stress

  • multiple systems appear affected

  • prescription longevity medications are being considered

Expert guidance helps avoid trial-and-error and unnecessary interventions.

Start a Pet Longevity Consult


Your Next Step

Metabolic dysfunction is most responsive before it becomes entrenched.

If concerns persist:

  • review related Functional Health Worksheets (inflammation, arthritis, senior screening)

  • focus on early, modifiable drivers

  • consider expert guidance if progress is unclear

There is no single correct solution — only the appropriate next step for your pet today.

 

About These Worksheets


This worksheet is part of the Functional Health system developed at PetFunctionHealth.com, designed to identify early decline and guide long-term longevity strategy.