A clinical investigation guide for adults with insulin resistance, weight resistance, or metabolic dysfunction unresponsive to standard interventions. The evidence here is earlier-stage — flagged honestly.
This guide is written for the patient whose lab pattern says 'metabolic syndrome' but whose intervention plan keeps stalling — diet, training, and sleep all in order, scale and HOMA-IR refusing to move. It maps four pathways under active investigation in the H. pylori metabolic literature.
The evidence here is earlier-stage than the rest of the series — flagged honestly. It is not a treatment protocol. It is a structured exploration of a hypothesis worth ruling in or out.
Metabolic dysregulation in the presence of H. pylori sits at the exploratory edge of the literature. The guide treats each pathway as testable, with evidence tiers explicit and honest about uncertainty.
Sustained low-grade IL-6 / TNF-α elevations from gastric immune activity have been associated with insulin receptor dysregulation in adipose and hepatic tissue.
Chronic H. pylori-associated gastric pH change cascades downstream, altering colonic short-chain fatty acid production. Investigated in pilot cohorts.
H. pylori-positive subjects show altered fasting ghrelin and post-prandial leptin response compared with H. pylori-negative controls in cross-sectional work.
Sustained systemic inflammation from chronic H. pylori has been associated with subclinical hepatic inflammation markers and NAFLD progression.
The guide doesn't replace a clinician. It gives you the language, the labs, and the literature — so the visit is a clinical exploration, not a search.
Every claim in this guide is tagged with one of three evidence tiers. The summary below previews the four claims central to the case for investigating H. pylori in resistant metabolic dysfunction — with the exploratory tier well represented. The full reference list — nine citations — sits at the back of the PDF.
No. It is an investigation guide — written to inform the conversation with a clinician. Diagnosis and treatment decisions belong to your physician.
No. The guide is content, sold separately from any Welyon product. It covers all three standard testing options — stool antigen, urea breath test, biopsy — and tells you what each costs and how to ask for it through your existing physician or insurer.
The guide spends a section on this exact situation — what 'in range' obscures, what to look at in combination, and the secondary markers that frequently shift the picture without changing the headline numbers.
14 days, no questions. If the guide isn't useful, the Lemon Squeezy receipt has a one-click refund link. We track this to keep the guides accountable.
The investigation series is authored by Welyon's editorial team and is being reviewed by the scientific advisory board currently in formation. Reviewer names will appear in the front matter of each guide upon confirmation.
30 pages, nine citations, four pathways under investigation, one structured exploration. PDF, instant download.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This guide is for informational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult your physician before acting on any information presented here.
Commercial interest disclosure. Welyon produces an at-home H. pylori testing kit and a physician-supervised Foundation Protocol referenced in this guide. The presence of these products is disclosed throughout — including on this page, the guide cover, and in the front matter of the PDF — and does not change the content of the guide. The investigation steps described would apply equally if neither product existed.
Editorial independence. Evidence grading in this guide follows the same three-tier rubric used across the H. Pylori Investigation Series, applied identically regardless of whether the resulting investigation routes a reader toward — or away from — Welyon's products.