You are currently viewing – Perimenopause and Muscle: Training and Nutrition Tweaks

– Perimenopause and Muscle: Training and Nutrition Tweaks

Perimenopause brings hormonal shifts that can affect muscle, recovery, tendons, fat distribution, and energy. The good news: targeted training and nutrition can maintain and even build muscle, protect bones, and improve performance and wellbeing.

What changes in perimenopause affect muscle?

  • Estrogen fluctuations and gradual decline can reduce muscle protein synthesis, increase central fat storage, and alter tendon and ligament properties.
  • Higher stress reactivity and sleep disruption can impair recovery and increase injury risk.
  • Insulin sensitivity may decline, making resistance training and carb timing more impactful.
  • Cycle irregularity makes “train by feel” and autoregulation useful, even if periods are sporadic.

Training tweaks that work

1) Lift heavy enough, often enough

  • Frequency: 3–4 resistance sessions per week covering all major muscle groups.
  • Intensity and sets:

    • Strength: 3–5 sets of 3–6 reps at 70–90% of 1RM, 2–3 exercises per session.
    • Hypertrophy: 3–5 sets of 6–12 reps at RPE 7–9 (1–3 reps in reserve).
    • Eccentric control: include slow lowers, but progress gradually to protect tendons.

  • Progression: increase load 2–5% when you hit top reps with good form, or add a set.
  • Autoregulate: if sleep, hot flashes, or stress spike, keep the movements but trim sets or load.

2) Add power and impact for bones and function

  • Power: 2–3 sets of 3–5 reps with lighter loads (30–60% 1RM) moved fast (e.g., trap bar jump, kettlebell swing, medicine ball throws).
  • Impact: low-to-moderate plyometrics 1–2 times/week (e.g., line hops, step jumps, jump rope), start with 20–40 ground contacts, progress slowly.
  • Warm-up thoroughly: 10–15 minutes (pulse raise, dynamic mobility, activation).

3) Cardio that complements strength

  • Zone 2 aerobic base: 2–3 sessions of 20–40 minutes (easy conversational pace).
  • HIIT: 1–2 sessions/week if recovery allows (e.g., 6–10 reps of 30–60 seconds hard, full recovery). Skip or reduce during high-symptom weeks.
  • Walks after meals (10–20 minutes) to support glucose control and recovery.

4) Cycle-aware without overcomplicating

  • If still cycling: you may feel strongest in mid-cycle; place heaviest sessions there and deload during high-symptom or low-sleep phases.
  • If irregular: track symptoms (sleep, hot flashes, mood, joint aches) and use them to adjust intensity week to week.

5) Pelvic floor and core

  • 2–3 short sessions/week of pressure-managed core work (exhale on effort, avoid excessive bearing down).
  • If you experience leaking, heaviness, or prolapse symptoms, see a pelvic floor physical therapist and adjust exercise selection/loads temporarily.

6) Recovery is part of the program

  • Sleep 7–9 hours. Use a cool room, layers, fans, light pajamas to manage night sweats.
  • Deload every 3–5 weeks or when symptoms spike: cut volume by ~30–40%.
  • Manage stress with breathwork, gentle mobility, nature walks, and consistent routines.

Nutrition tweaks for muscle and energy

Protein: hit the anabolic signal

  • Daily target: 1.6–2.2 g/kg body weight.
  • Per meal: 0.4–0.55 g/kg (generally 25–40 g) with 2.5–3 g leucine from high-quality sources.
  • Distribute across 3–4 meals. Optional pre-sleep protein: 30–40 g casein or Greek yogurt/cottage cheese for overnight synthesis and satiety.

Carbohydrates: fuel training, support hormones

  • Daily range: 3–5 g/kg on most days; up to 5–7 g/kg for high-volume phases.
  • Timing: include 20–40 g carbs with 20–30 g protein 1–2 hours pre-workout; 1 g/kg carbs plus 0.3 g/kg protein within 2 hours post-workout on hard days.
  • Choose fiber-rich carbs (oats, beans, fruit, potatoes, whole grains) and adjust fiber lower before intense sessions if GI sensitivity is an issue.

Fats: keep hormones and joints happy

  • Daily range: ~0.8–1.0 g/kg from mostly unsaturated sources (olive oil, nuts, seeds, avocado, oily fish).
  • Do not push fats too low for prolonged periods.

Energy balance: conservative cuts, smart maintenance

  • For fat loss, use modest deficits (about 250–400 kcal/day), maintain protein and resistance training.
  • During high-symptom or heavy training weeks, eat at maintenance to support recovery and mood.

Hydration and electrolytes

  • Daily fluids: clear urine straw-colored most of the day.
  • Training: 3–8 ml/kg in the hour before; sip during. Replace 500–1000 mg sodium per liter of sweat in hot sessions or if you are a salty sweater.
  • Alcohol and evening caffeine can worsen sleep and hot flashes; reduce or avoid on training and high-symptom days.

Key micronutrients

  • Calcium: 1000–1200 mg/day from food and/or supplements (split doses ≤500 mg each).
  • Vitamin D: typically 1000–2000 IU/day; aim for a 25(OH)D blood level around 30–50 ng/mL, test and adjust with your clinician.
  • Magnesium: 320–400 mg/day (glycinate or citrate forms are gentle on the gut).
  • Iron: if bleeding is heavy or energy is low, ask for ferritin testing; supplement only if low and under guidance.
  • Vitamin B12 (if vegan), iodine (if low dairy/seafood), and zinc as needed.

Evidence-supported supplements

  • Creatine monohydrate: 3–5 g/day, any time. Supports strength, muscle, cognition, and mood. Optional loading 20 g/day for 5–7 days.
  • Omega-3s (EPA+DHA): 1–2 g/day; check with your clinician if on anticoagulants.
  • Collagen or gelatin 10–15 g plus 50–100 mg vitamin C, 45–60 minutes before tendon/ligament rehab or plyometric sessions.
  • Caffeine 1–3 mg/kg pre-workout can aid performance but may worsen sleep/hot flashes—trial earlier in the day.

Sample week

Adjust sets, loads, and rest based on your recovery and schedule. Keep sessions 45–70 minutes.

  • Monday: Lower-body strength (squat or trap bar deadlift 4×5; RDL 3×6–8; split squat 3×8/side; calf raises 3×12–15). Core and pelvic floor 10 minutes.
  • Tuesday: Zone 2 cardio 30 minutes + mobility 10 minutes.
  • Wednesday: Upper-body hypertrophy and power (push press 3×3 fast; bench press 4×6–8; row 4×8–10; pulldown or pull-ups 3×6–10; face pulls 3×12–15).
  • Thursday: Walk 20 minutes after meals or easy bike; optional yoga or breathwork.
  • Friday: Full-body power and plyo (medicine ball throws 4×5; kettlebell swings 4×8–12; step-down to controlled jump 3×6; hip thrust 3×8–10). Finish with calf-ankle stiffness drills.
  • Saturday: Optional HIIT (6×45 seconds hard/2 minutes easy) or hike. If symptoms are high, swap for Zone 2.
  • Sunday: Rest, long walk, mobility. Meal prep and sleep wind-down.

Pre- and post-workout fueling

  • 1–2 hours pre: 20–40 g protein + 20–40 g carbs (e.g., yogurt with fruit and granola; eggs and toast; protein smoothie with oats/banana).
  • During: water; add electrolytes in heat or long sessions.
  • Within 2 hours post: 0.3 g/kg protein + ~1 g/kg carbs on hard days (e.g., chicken, rice, vegetables; tofu noodle bowl; salmon, potato, salad).
  • Evening sessions: move caffeine earlier; consider pre-sleep protein; use cooling strategies for sleep.

Injury prevention and tendon care

  • Gradual load increases: 5–10% per week on volume; slower for plyometrics.
  • Include isometrics for sore tendons (e.g., 5×45-second holds) and progress to slow eccentrics and heavy-slow resistance.
  • Footwear, surface choice, and warm-ups matter more as collagen dynamics change.

Tracking and adjusting

  • Keep a brief log: sleep quality, hot flashes/night sweats, perceived stress, and session RPE.
  • Assess progress monthly: 1–2 strength lifts, circumference measurements, how clothes fit, energy, and mood.
  • Consider a baseline and follow-up bone density scan (DEXA) if risk factors are present; body composition can be informative but is optional.

Hormone therapy and medical care

  • Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT/HRT) can help symptoms, bone density, and may modestly support body composition; it is individualized and depends on your health history and timing since last period.
  • Work with a clinician for persistent sleep issues, heavy bleeding, mood changes, or if you have cardiovascular, thrombotic, or cancer risk factors.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Only doing cardio and skipping heavy resistance training.
  • Chronic aggressive dieting that sacrifices protein and recovery.
  • Random HIIT without an aerobic base or adequate sleep.
  • Ignoring pelvic floor symptoms or joint/tendon niggles.
  • Under-fueling around training and over-caffeinating to compensate for poor sleep.

Quick-start plan

  1. Lift 3 days/week: one lower, one upper, one full-body power/hypertrophy.
  2. Walk daily 10–20 minutes after meals; add 2 Zone 2 cardio sessions weekly.
  3. Eat protein at 3–4 meals (25–40 g each) and include carbs before and after hard sessions.
  4. Take creatine 3–5 g/day and ensure calcium, vitamin D, and magnesium are on point.
  5. Sleep in a cool room, reduce alcohol, and keep caffeine before early afternoon.
  6. Log symptoms and autoregulate intensity; deload every 3–5 weeks.

Disclaimer: This information is for education and is not medical advice. Consult your healthcare provider for personalized guidance, especially regarding hormone therapy, supplements, or if you have medical conditions.

Leave a Reply