Northfortuly
Member
Reta is king. smart of you to consider it while on AAS.
Just be mindful that Reta can cause a temporary increase in heart rate. From what I’ve read, it starts to even out after 4-6 weeks. But still, be careful.
Voila
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Reta is king. smart of you to consider it while on AAS.
Tirz also does similar for most folks, but maybe not as pronounced. And yes, it does seem to reduce over time, but it’s not clear if the reduction is due to your body adjusting, or from the weight loss. This issue is why Bryan Johnson stopped taking it, as he feels extra heart beats will shorten your lifespan. He also feels GLP meds hurt your sleep cycle, possibly due to the elevated HR.Just be mindful that Reta can cause a temporary increase in heart rate. From what I’ve read, it starts to even out after 4-6 weeks. But still, be careful.
Voila
For a friend sending me some fro a place called Skye peptides???? Free so gonna try that first?Truthfully, I would use PGB. Domestic and tested many times. Cost for a kit of 10 x 24mg is ~$450. At a mid dose of 6mg, that is about 40 weeks worth.
She ain't t charging me anything she my homegirl she sending me some from some place called sky peptides??? But she said that place ZYH or whatever was cool but that pbg was like shopping in a thrift store that smells like pee..... hahaha She is a close friend so we don't charge each othe for stuff.. although dhe never really needs anything from me..What's she charging? Reta really isn't that hard to get everyone carries it....
You must not know me very well!!! A study can go get fuck fucked IMHO, I only take low dose if the shit in conjunction with higher dosess of multiple AAS.. Good health to me anymoreI would stick with Tirzepatide. There are no comparative studies between the two in the treatment of metabolic disorders. Glucagon receptor agonists have very little data around them in general. Retatrutide contains less GLP-1 and GIP, two polypeptides that have great evidence for their health benifits. Trials are still ongoing for Retatrutide, so this could change, but for now I wouldn't change.
This is one for HBA1c
View attachment 317533
I've seen a NASH one in the past, but I'm too lazy to do another search
www.medicalnewstoday.com
ByeWelp, reality has set in! Tracy is gone! Good luck everyone
Skye is very reputable, though very expensive. PGB is just a very convenient vendor who sells with a slight markup compared to China vendors. Their thorough Jano testing makes it worthwhile for most.She ain't t charging me anything she my homegirl she sending me some from some place called sky peptides??? But she said that place ZYH or whatever was cool but that pbg was like shopping in a thrift store that smells like pee..... hahaha She is a close friend so we don't charge each othe for stuff.. although dhe never really needs anything from me..
Yeah I know that place cost a bunch... I guess she is somehow intertwined... I told my friend the other day when I bought some peptides from PGB that it's like she gets to wear gucci and I shop at walmart(which is no problem luv wally word) she come back and said PGB was like shopping at thrift store that smell like pee not walmart..lol obviously itd personal.. I didn't ask, I just thought it was funny!!! I see no problem with either place.. welll except price but its not always about the cheapest.. I'm blessed to be able to get some Ferrari parts for free.. imma slap em on my pinto, and pimp it!!!Skye is very reputable, though very expensive. PGB is just a very convenient vendor who sells with a slight markup compared to China vendors. Their thorough Jano testing makes it worthwhile for most.
So potentially useful if you may be dabbling with insulin???![]()
Vision loss: GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic linked to 3 eye conditions
A new review reports that nine people taking semaglutide and tirzepatide — the active ingredient in GLP-1 medications — experienced vision issues, including three potentially blinding eye conditions.www.medicalnewstoday.com
Following this news that sudden drop in BG with glp1 drugs can create this issues, reta become even more interesting as it doesn't allow your body to go hypoglicemic. That's why ppl find it doesn't reduce your BG much.... For what I have understood it's not really it doesn't reduce it much.. it is more a balancer of BG. So compares to tirz and sema that will just reduce it as much as they can so unless you are counterbalancing it with loads of carb or induced insulin resistance (HGH) you can go hypo.
Reta instead as soon as your body goes below a threshold it starts releasing glucose from the liver and raise the BG.
Many ppl that were suffering from hypoglicemia fixed their BG using reta
Kinda even so many of the effect and mechanism of glucagon are still not really understood or maybe not shown in any studies as it's still being approved at least with reta.So potentially useful if you may be dabbling with insulin???
Kinda even so many of the effect and mechanism of glucagon are still not really understood or maybe not shown in any studies as it's still being approved at least with reta.
I got skin sensitivity on Mounjaro and compounded Tirz. But it was worse on Reta. I’ve also seen Ozempic users report the same on Reddit.l
Sema 7.2mg and CagriSema trials both ended up being failures(hitting Novo's stock price) , despite early promising results, so worth keeping in mind that Reta may yet turn up with a few surprises of its own, especially with so little data regarding glucagon.
Didn't you and others develop full body skin sensitivity for some unknown reason?
I haven't seen that mentioned in the Reta trial, so maybe it's a special feature of our perfectly made, safety focused Chinese UGL produced copies.
I got skin sensitivity on Mounjaro and compounded Tirz. But it was worse on Reta. I’ve also seen Ozempic users report the same on Reddit.
Skin sensitivity is a thing of all the glp1 Tirzepatide and Semaglutide have it reported too.l
Sema 7.2mg and CagriSema trials both ended up being failures(hitting Novo's stock price) , despite early promising results, so worth keeping in mind that Reta may yet turn up with a few surprises of its own, especially with so little data regarding glucagon.
Didn't you and others develop full body skin sensitivity for some unknown reason?
I haven't seen that mentioned in the Reta trial, so maybe it's a special feature of our perfectly made, safety focused Chinese UGL produced copies.
Correct, it's something that can affect any glp-1 usersI got skin sensitivity on Mounjaro and compounded Tirz. But it was worse on Reta. I’ve also seen Ozempic users report the same on Reddit.
You make a comment or two per day that is super attention seeking.. it’s like you want us to coddle you and assure you everything is going to be okay. Guess what man, everything will be okay… life is great. If Tracy comes back that surely makes everyone’s life in here better - if he doesn’t… nothing changes.Welp, reality has set in! Tracy is gone! Good luck everyone
It's not reported in any of the clinical data for the pharma versions of either of those compounds, including the 3 and 4 year studies, which strongly suggests a systemic immunogenic reaction to me.
Not to be confused with a limited site reaction, also an immune response, but much more limited.
Filtering to remove aggregates could help stop that from happening,
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Expanding Bedside Filtration—A Powerful Tool to Protect Patients From Protein Aggregates
Protein immunogenicity is intensively researched by academics, biopharmaceutical companies, and authorities as it can compromise the safety and efficacy of a biopharmaceutical drug. So far, the exact protein aggregate properties inducing immune responses are not known. Possible protein-related...colab.ws
