Uterine fibroids are highly sensitive to estrogen and insulin. In my clinical experience and detailed in The Fasting Reset, strategic fasting lowers both hormones, creating an environment where fibroid growth slows and, in many cases, tumors measurably shrink. Women aged 45-54 dealing with hormonal changes often see the best response because perimenopause already shifts estrogen metabolism. The key is consistency with 16:8 or 18:6 intermittent fasting windows while keeping protein intake adequate to protect muscle mass, especially when joint pain limits movement.
Don't rely on the scale alone. Measure these four indicators every 7-14 days:
Request a baseline pelvic ultrasound before starting. Repeat every 3-4 months. Look for any decrease in fibroid volume percentage rather than just diameter. Many clients see 15-30% volume reduction in 4-6 months. Also track hemoglobin and ferritin if bleeding is heavy; fasting often reduces blood loss within two cycles. For those managing diabetes or blood pressure alongside weight, these improvements usually appear first and build confidence when previous diets failed.
Use a simple notebook or app to log measurements every Sunday morning after your longest fast. Pair fasting with 30-minute daily walks to overcome joint pain barriers. Insurance rarely covers specialized programs, so these at-home metrics empower you without added cost. Remember, progress is rarely linear; celebrate every 10% improvement in symptoms. Women who track consistently in my Fasting Reset method maintain results long-term because they understand their body's unique signals instead of following conflicting nutrition advice.