Since a standard scale won't tell you whether you're losing fat or muscle, a DEXA scan is the best way to track real progress. This test provides a detailed breakdown of your body composition, showing how much of your weight comes from fat, muscle, and bone. This allows you to target the right kind of fat loss while ensuring you're maintaining or even gaining muscle mass.
A DEXA scan is quick and non-invasive, taking about 15 minutes while you remain fully clothed. Results are typically available immediately after the scan, allowing you to see exactly how your body composition is changing.
One of the biggest mistakes people make when losing weight is losing muscle along with fat. Since muscle plays a crucial role in metabolism, mobility, and even longevity, muscle loss can be a serious setback to your health.
Not all fat is the same, either. Visceral fat, the fat stored around your organs, is the most dangerous type, linked to an increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, and metabolic disorders. Subcutaneous fat, the fat just under your skin, is much less harmful and even provides some protective benefits.
Tracking body composition with DEXA scans over time helps ensure that you're prioritizing visceral fat loss while preserving muscle mass.
Even if you're targeting the right type of fat, *crash dieting is not the answer.* Severely restricting calories or eliminating entire food groups can lead to nutrient deficiencies and hormonal imbalances. Studies show that extreme dieting often results in muscle loss, a decrease in resting metabolic rate, and increased hunger hormones, making long-term weight maintenance nearly impossible.
For sustainable fat loss, your body needs an approach it can maintain without triggering a starvation response. Slow, consistent fat loss ensures that you're improving your health—not just chasing a lower number on the scale. We recommend aiming for about 1% of body weight per week—a reasonable target that minimizes muscle loss while promoting steady fat reduction.
The best place to start your weight loss journey isn't with a fad diet or a trendy workout—it's with consistent, balanced nutrition and movement.
For most people, this approach alone is enough to lose significant weight.
If you've truly committed to diet and exercise and still struggle with weight loss, Ozempic (semaglutide) may be an option. This medication suppresses appetite and has been shown to provide significant cardiovascular benefits, including lowering ApoB and LDL cholesterol levels.
While Ozempic is a relatively safe medication, we do not recommend it as a first-line solution. The best approach is to first adopt healthy habits through diet and exercise. If weight loss remains a struggle, we work with patients to prescribe Ozempic and track their metabolic and cardiovascular biomarkers to ensure the medication is improving overall health—not just reducing weight.