Feb. 2, 2026

193. The GLP-1 Revolution: Food Noise, Muscle Loss & The Future of Metabolic Medicine | Priya Jaisinghani. MD

193. The GLP-1 Revolution: Food Noise, Muscle Loss & The Future of Metabolic Medicine | Priya Jaisinghani. MD
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193. The GLP-1 Revolution: Food Noise, Muscle Loss & The Future of Metabolic Medicine | Priya Jaisinghani. MD
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Today, Dr. Priya Jaisinghani joins us to cut through the headlines. We move beyond the "cheating" narrative and explore the biology of obesity as a chronic disease. We discuss the phenomenon of "Food Noise"—the constant mental static about eating—and why silencing it is a matter of brain chemistry, not willpower.

We get into the weeds of patient selection, explaining why BMI is a broken metric (especially for South Asian populations) and why being "skinny" doesn't mean you’re metabolically healthy. We also tackle the serious risks: the "muscle crisis" (sarcopenia), the dangers of unregulated compounding pharmacies, and what happens when you stop these drugs.

What We Discuss:

  • The "Food Noise" Phenomenon

  • Patient Selection & The Broken BMI

  • The Muscle Crisis: Quality vs. Quantity

  • Safety, Side Effects & The Compounding Trap

  • The Future of Metabolic Medicine

Resources & Links:

Connect with Dr. Jaisinghani:

Studies & Literature Mentioned:

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Concepts & People:

Want to work with Dr. Raja?

  • Refining Health & Performance is opening a limited number of founding member spots for the telemedicine practice. We focus on health span, longevity, and performance using a Medicine 3.0 approach. Apply at RefiningHealthRx.com.

Guest Bio:

Dr. Priya Jaisinghani is a triple-board certified physician in Internal Medicine, Endocrinology, and Obesity Medicine, and currently serves as a Clinical Assistant Professor at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.

She completed her training at Weill Cornell and New York-Presbyterian Hospital before becoming a key architect at NYU Langone, where she helped build their official obesity clinical care pathway.

Dr. Jaisinghani is a leading voice in the cardiometabolic space, specializing in the intersection of hormonal health and metabolic dysfunction. She is deeply passionate about treating obesity as a chronic, complex disease rather than a willpower failure.

Beyond her clinical practice, she is a dedicated educator who has secured grant funding to develop tools that teach residents how to dismantle weight bias in the exam room. She serves as a vital bridge between endocrinology, bariatric surgery, and sports medicine to treat the whole patient.