FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Las Vegas-based longevity coach urges men considering
GLP-1 medications to complete a full medical workup and address sleep, strength
training, and inflammation first — then use the peptide as a strategic tool to
assist the process.
LAS VEGAS, NV — With more than 15 million Americans now estimated to
be using GLP-1 medications like Ozempic, Wegovy, Zepbound, and Mounjaro, Dr.
John Spencer Ellis, a leader in men's longevity coaching, is issuing an
important clarification for men over 50 considering the therapy: the drugs
work, but using them without addressing the biological foundation first can
accelerate the exact aging process most men are trying to reverse.
"Let me be clear: I am not against GLP-1
medications," said Ellis. "These are powerful, legitimate tools that
are transforming metabolic health for millions of people. What I am against is
men over 50 jumping to them as a first step, without the medical workup,
foundational lifestyle work, and muscle preservation protocols that make the
difference between a transformation and a costly mistake."
The Muscle Loss Problem the Marketing Doesn't Mention
The concern is grounded in published data. Analyses of
the landmark STEP semaglutide trials and SURMOUNT tirzepatide trials have shown
that as much as 25 to 40 percent of the weight lost on GLP-1 medications can be
lean body mass rather than fat. For men over 50 — who are already losing
approximately 1 percent of lean muscle per year to age-related sarcopenia —
that acceleration can be catastrophic.
The stakes are backed by longevity research. The Lancet
PURE study demonstrated that every 5-kilogram reduction in grip strength (a
simple proxy for total muscle function) is associated with a 16 percent
increase in all-cause mortality risk. Landmark research published in JAMA
Network Open in 2018 showed men in the highest cardiorespiratory fitness
quintile had approximately 80 percent lower all-cause mortality than men in the
lowest. Muscle mass, muscle function, and cardiovascular fitness are among the
strongest predictors of how long a man will live.
What Ellis Recommends First
Ellis' framework begins with a complete medical workup,
including comprehensive bloodwork covering testosterone, thyroid, fasting
insulin, HbA1c, ApoB, hsCRP, vitamin D, and B12. Many men discover underlying
hormonal or metabolic dysfunction that is driving their weight problem — issues
that GLP-1 alone will not fully address.
The next layer is foundational lifestyle work. Sleep
quality is optimized first, because sleep deprivation drives insulin resistance
and cortisol elevation. Van Cauter et al. published in JAMA showed just one
week of 5-hour nights reduces testosterone 10 to 15 percent. Structured
resistance training two to four times per week is added to preserve and build
lean muscle. Anti-inflammatory whole-food nutrition with adequate protein —
approximately 0.7 to 1 gram per pound of bodyweight — is established to support
muscle preservation. Stress management reduces the chronic cortisol elevation
that drives visceral fat.
"After that foundation is in place, GLP-1
medications become a genuinely strategic tool — an assist rather than a
substitute," Ellis added. "Used correctly, alongside strength
training, adequate protein, and medical supervision, they can produce
transformative results without sacrificing the muscle mass that determines how
long a man will live and how well he will live it. Used incorrectly, they leave
men lighter, weaker, and biologically older."
About Dr. John Spencer Ellis
Dr. John Spencer Ellis is a Las Vegas-based performance
and life optimization coach and a leading men's longevity coach with more than
three decades of experience. His credentials include a Doctor of Education,
MBA, and bachelor's degrees in Business Administration and Health Science. He
holds 15 professional certifications. He is a seven-time bestselling author,
Personal Trainer Hall of Fame inductee, and has been nominated for induction
into the Fitness Hall of Fame. His work has been featured across ABC, NBC, CBS,
FOX, ESPN, USA Today, MSN, AP News, and Business Insider.
Men interested in learning more may visit https://johnspencerellis.com.
Media Contact:
Dr. John Spencer Ellis 2780 S. Jones Blvd, Ste 200-3464
Las Vegas, NV 89146-5623 Phone: (480) 382-2464 Email:
johnspencerellis@gmail.com Web: https://johnspencerellis.com

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