If diet and exercise alone aren't working, there may be underlying metabolic, hormonal, or inflammatory factors sabotaging your weight loss efforts. We identify and address these root causes. Our clinic is conveniently located near Queen Creek in Chandler, AZ, offering patients from Queen Creek access to advanced, non-surgical treatment options.
Queen Creek residents typically reach our Chandler office in 25–30 minutes via the Loop 202 Santan Freeway west. Queen Creek patients are often working-age families and weekend athletes, plus the active-retiree demographic from Encanterra seeking non-surgical orthopedics, hormone optimization, and recovery-focused care.
Equestrian and trail riding culture, youth sports at Founders Park and Mansel Carter Oasis, golf at Encanterra and the Links at Queen Creek, and a heavy CrossFit, lifting, and outdoor-recreation orientation. Olive Mill and Schnepf Farms anchor a strong agritourism and outdoor-event scene.
We regularly see patients from Encanterra, Pecan Creek, Cortina, Queen Creek Station, and Hastings Farms.
Weight-loss-resistant patients usually fall into three groups: (1) perimenopausal and menopausal women whose previous strategies stopped working; (2) men and women 35–55 with insulin resistance, sleep issues, and chronic stress that are silently driving fat storage; and (3) patients who have done several rounds of intensive dieting and now have measurable metabolic adaptation that needs to be repaired.
Patients from Queen Creek benefit from a short drive (about 25 minutes) to our Chandler clinic for comprehensive weight loss resistance care.
Preserving and building muscle is one of the most important variables in metabolic recovery, and dieting without resistance training usually backfires.
Sleep quality directly affects insulin sensitivity, hunger hormones, and cravings; poor sleep often outweighs dietary effort.
Chronic stress drives cortisol patterns that promote central fat storage and undermine willpower around food.
Steady-state cardio has a role, but for most weight-loss-resistant patients, building muscle and improving daily activity matters more than adding more cardio sessions.
Medical weight loss is most effective when paired with behavioral, nutritional, and metabolic care — and in appropriate patients, GLP-1 agonists have strong evidence for weight reduction and improvement of related metabolic markers. We evaluate medication use case-by-case rather than as a default.
Persistent caloric restriction without addressing thyroid, sex hormones, sleep, and cortisol can drive metabolic adaptation — your body lowers its baseline burn and increases hunger drive. Real progress usually requires repairing the underlying physiology, not just cutting more calories.
GLP-1 receptor agonists like semaglutide and tirzepatide are one tool we evaluate for appropriate patients, typically when significant metabolic and weight-related health concerns are present and lifestyle approaches haven't been sufficient. They're not a fit for everyone, and we discuss benefits, risks, and the long-term plan honestly before starting.
Insulin resistance is multifactorial — visceral fat, sleep quality, muscle mass, dietary patterns, chronic stress, and genetics all contribute. Effective treatment usually means addressing several of these at once rather than relying on any single intervention.
Optimizing thyroid, sex hormones, and cortisol patterns can meaningfully improve body composition outcomes when those systems are dysregulated. It is not a substitute for nutrition and training, but it often unlocks results that diet and exercise alone weren't producing.
We treat the underlying problem, not just symptoms.
Your treatment plan is based on what works, not what's covered.
Queen Creek residents typically reach our Chandler office in 25–30 minutes via the Loop 202 Santan Freeway west.
Led by Dr. Kelly Romero, NMD, with a team of specialists.
Book a free 30-minute consultation. We'll review your history, discuss your goals, and recommend the right treatment plan.