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Sugar Cravings: What your Body is Really Asking For

If you’ve felt pressure to cut out sugar, eat “cleaner,” or quiet that constant snack voice, you’re not alone. Cravings aren’t a failure—they’re feedback. Often, they’re a sign that blood sugar isn’t well-balanced. Supporting blood sugar helps regulate energy, mood, and appetite, and may also play a role in reducing the risk of breast cancer. When blood sugar is supported, sugar cravings become far easier to manage.

Myth #1: “I Just Need More Willpower.”

You don’t need more discipline—you need better nourishment. When meals support blood sugar, and stress is managed, cravings naturally lose their intensity.

Myth #2: “I Need to Cut All Sugar.”

Completely cutting out sugar often adds pressure rather than relief. When foods are included with balance and intention, sugar loses its urgency. This helps break the restriction cycle and rebuild trust with your body—so enjoyment feels calm, not chaotic.

Myth #3: “Skipping Meals Will Help.”

Under-eating or overly aggressive fasting can lead to blood sugar crashes. Those crashes increase urgency around food, making cravings louder and harder to manage later in the day.

Cravings aren’t random—and they’re not self-sabotage. In most cases, they stem from identifiable root causes such as blood sugar dysregulation, inadequate fueling, chronic stress, or ingrained habits. When those drivers are addressed, cravings often soften significantly or even disappear.

Sustainable change requires a holistic approach that looks beyond restriction to metabolic health, meal timing, stress, and daily routines.

1. Front-Load Your Meals.

Skipping breakfast or under-eating early often sets the stage for stronger evening cravings. Aim for a protein-rich meal (25–30 grams) within 60–90 minutes of waking and space meals evenly throughout the day to reduce biological rebound eating.

2. Break the Habit Loop.

Not every craving is hunger—many are habit. That automatic desire for dessert is often just a familiar pattern. Because the brain prioritizes efficiency, it tends to repeat familiar behavioral patterns. Try replacing automatic snacks with comforting rituals, such as herbal tea, a short walk, a pause to check in with yourself, or changing your environment, which can help interrupt autopilot and create more mindful choices.

3. Balance Blood Sugar.

Even whole foods can drive cravings if meals aren’t balanced. Eating carbs without enough protein, fat, or fiber can spike blood sugar and trigger fatigue and sugar cravings hours later. Building meals with protein, fiber, and healthy fats—and eating carbs last—helps steady energy, mood, and appetite, making cravings much easier to manage.

Cravings aren’t something to fight—they’re something to understand. With the guidance of our providers and health coaches at Carolina Total Wellness, we help uncover what’s driving them in the first place—whether it’s blood sugar imbalance, stress, nutrient gaps, or habits.

By addressing the root cause and creating a plan tailored to you, cravings become steadier, calmer, and far more sustainable to manage over time.

Breast Cancer Prevention: A Functional Medicine Approach to Prevention

Breast cancer is a malignant tumor originating in the breast, often involving uncontrolled growth of cells.

It is the most common cancer among women worldwide, excluding skin cancers, and the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in females. Globally, it affects about 1 in 8 women. Incidence rates continue to rise, though early detection has improved survival.

Symptoms typically include a painless lump in the breast or armpit, nipple changes, skin dimpling, redness, or swelling like orange-peel texture. Early stages may be asymptomatic, emphasizing the need for screening.

Breast cancer starts from a complex interplay of genetic, environmental, and lifestyle factors. Inherited mutations in genes (e.g BRCA1/2) account for 5-10% of cases, predisposing women to aggressive subtypes. However, most cases (85-95%) stem from modifiable risks: hormonal imbalances (e.g., prolonged estrogen exposure from early menarche or late menopause), obesity, insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, toxins, and poor diet.

Hypercholesterolemia and metabolic syndrome increase risk by promoting cell proliferation and inflammation. Functional medicine views these as interconnected—e.g., insulin resistance drives estrogen production in fat tissue, fueling hormone-positive tumors.

Environmental toxins such as bisphenol A (BPA), phthalates, and parabens act as endocrine-disrupting chemicals that mimic estrogen, potentially promoting breast cancer development and increasing local estrogen levels in breast tissue.

Carolina Total Wellness Physicians prioritize upstream testing to uncover root causes before cancer develops. Inflammation markers like high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) signal chronic immune activation, a precursor to cancer formation.

For insulin resistance, its important to assess fasting insulin, HOMA-IR score, and HbA1c; elevated levels correlate with 20-50% higher breast cancer risk in postmenopausal women.

Hormone panels are crucial: measuring estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and assessing estrogen breakdown to detect estrogen dominance or imbalances that promote proliferation. Additional tests include advanced lipid profiles for cholesterol components, and toxin panel to assess the toxin burden.

These labs guide personalized prevention, with moderate evidence supporting their role in reducing cancer risk.

A functional approach emphasizes lifestyle to modulate risks.

The Mediterranean diet—rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, olive oil, and fish—reduces breast cancer risk by 20-30% through anti-inflammatory polyphenols and fiber, which lower insulin and estrogen levels. Aim for 25-30g daily fiber to decrease cancer risk.

Physical activity (150 min/week moderate) enhances insulin sensitivity and reduces recurrence.

Targeted supplements include omega-3s (1-2g EPA/DHA daily) for reducing inflammation and vitamin D (2,000-4,000 IU) to optimize vitamin D levels, inversely linked to mortality. Curcumin (500-1,000mg) and sulforaphane from broccoli sprouts support detoxification and improve estrogen metabolism. Our DIM detox formula is an excellent supplement formulation which contains broccoli extract. It is always important to consult with your doctor before starting any new supplements to avoid any interactions.

By addressing inflammation, insulin, toxins, nutrients and hormones through diet and testing, functional medicine empowers prevention. If you would like to be proactive towards breast cancer prevention, consult with one of our physicians at Carolina Total Wellness who can create a personalized plan for you.

Functional Medicine

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