Body Composition in Perimenopause: Understanding the Changes and How to Respond
Perimenopause brings real changes to muscle mass, fat distribution, and bone density. This guide explains what is happening and what to do about it.
What Body Composition Means and Why It Changes
Body composition refers to the proportion of your body made up of fat, muscle, bone, and water. It is a more meaningful health metric than body weight alone, because two women of the same weight can have very different health profiles depending on their ratio of fat to muscle. Perimenopause drives significant changes in body composition through multiple hormonal pathways. Oestrogen supports muscle protein synthesis and is protective against muscle loss. As levels fluctuate and fall, the rate of muscle breakdown accelerates and the rate of muscle building slows. This process, known as sarcopenia when it becomes clinically significant, begins in the mid-thirties but accelerates markedly during the menopause transition. Simultaneously, fat mass tends to increase and redistribute, with more accumulating viscerally (around the organs) rather than subcutaneously (under the skin). Bone mineral density also begins to decline, a process that accelerates in the first few years after the final period. These three changes together, less muscle, more visceral fat, and lower bone density, represent the core body composition challenge of perimenopause.
The Consequences of Muscle Loss
Muscle is not just about strength and appearance. It is the primary site of glucose disposal in the body, making it central to insulin sensitivity and metabolic health. Every kilogram of muscle lost during perimenopause reduces resting metabolic rate, making weight management harder. Muscle also plays a role in maintaining resting energy expenditure through the post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC) effect. Functionally, muscle loss reduces grip strength, balance, and the ease of daily physical tasks. It increases the risk of injury during exercise and the risk of falls in later life. Research suggests that women can lose up to 1% of muscle mass per year during the menopause transition if they do not actively counteract it. The good news is that muscle is highly responsive to appropriate training stimulus at any age. Women who start resistance training in their late forties and fifties see meaningful gains in muscle mass and strength within 8-12 weeks of consistent effort.
Tracking Body Composition Accurately
Bathroom scales measure total body weight but tell you nothing about how much of that weight is fat versus muscle. This is a significant limitation during perimenopause, when the scales may not move but fat is increasing and muscle is decreasing simultaneously. More useful measures include waist circumference, which correlates with visceral fat, and the waist-to-height ratio (waist circumference divided by height), with a value above 0.5 indicating elevated metabolic risk. Body fat percentage can be estimated by DEXA scan (the gold standard, also used for bone density), by bioelectrical impedance scales (consumer-grade, less precise), or by a trained practitioner using skin fold callipers. DEXA scanning is available at some GP practices and private clinics. Many gyms now offer InBody or similar bioelectrical impedance scans as part of fitness assessments. Tracking waist circumference monthly alongside a simple visual log of how clothing fits is a practical and free alternative.
Resistance Training: The Non-Negotiable Tool
If there is one intervention that addresses multiple body composition goals simultaneously in perimenopause, it is resistance training. Lifting challenging weights, or using bodyweight, resistance bands, or machines, stimulates muscle protein synthesis through a pathway that remains active regardless of oestrogen status. It increases muscle mass, reduces fat mass, improves insulin sensitivity, strengthens tendons and connective tissue, and is one of the most evidence-backed tools for preserving bone density. A useful minimum is two full-body resistance sessions per week, using compound movements (squats, hip hinges, presses, rows, carries) that challenge multiple muscle groups. Over time, progressive overload, adding weight, reps, or complexity over weeks and months, is what drives continued adaptation. Many women feel intimidated by weights initially, but the physiological case for them during perimenopause is strong enough to justify making them a priority.
Protein: The Dietary Foundation of Muscle Retention
Building and maintaining muscle requires adequate dietary protein. The recommended dietary allowance of 0.8 g/kg body weight per day is widely considered insufficient for perimenopausal women who are physically active. Current evidence suggests 1.2-1.6 g/kg per day, spread across three or four meals, is more appropriate for women in midlife who are trying to preserve or build muscle. Spreading protein intake matters because muscle protein synthesis is limited per meal: roughly 30-40 grams of protein per sitting provides the maximum stimulus. Practical sources include eggs, fish, chicken, lean red meat, dairy, tofu, tempeh, edamame, Greek yoghurt, cottage cheese, and protein supplements if needed. Getting protein at breakfast is particularly important because overnight fasting means muscle protein breakdown has been occurring through the night. A 25-30 gram protein breakfast is one of the simplest and most effective body composition habits to build during perimenopause.
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