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just eat normal man. eat a balanced diet and let the medication do the work.Anyone do PSMF while on GLPs and with good results? I.e loss of bunch of fat fast with preservation of muscle/strength?
I did PSMF once about 10 years ago while natty and without GLPs. Wondering how good it'd be now that I'm enhanced and on Reta...
Does anyone know if there's any evidence to support the claims of about the speed of weight loss correlating to loose skin? So many people are willing to die on that hill, and I've yet to see a single piece of evidence, while every anecdotal report seems to be purely connected to genetics.
Just curious as it bugs me that so many people push this nonsense (imo)
@Ghoul
Agree, I can't believe people are married to the opposite opinion.70% is down to age, genetics, total volume of weight loss, and how many times skin has been stretched before. All immutable factors.
Most of the rest comes down to exercise and a diet optimized to prevent muscle mass loss and provide sufficient protein for collagen repair,
A huge part.Most of the casually observed anecdotal "extra" loose skin that's blamed on the speed of loss is actually the muscle mass that's lost with rapid weight loss when exercise and protein intake aren't managed to prevent that from happening, and skin loses the lean mass scaffolding along with fat.
It's the real super stack for weight loss.rHGH can really help with this a lot (and TRT). They both shift weight loss to preferentially be fat, stimulate protein synthesis to maintain muscle. GH also speeds skin remodeling, which is ideal when you're shrinking fast.
Personally I think GLPs and rHGH are the perfect combo when losing a lot of weight. Of course, diet (sufficient protein) and exercise make a big difference for the final result too.
Was on 4mg Reta for two weeks and went up to 6mg this week. Don’t feel the symptoms as bad as I did with 4mg, figured they might be more noticeable when jumping up to 6mg but not quite. My body getting used to it or just a bad vial of Reta?
@Ghoul Do you think adding a second GLP1 to my 15mg reta serves any purpose in terms of appetite suppression?
Or should I rather continue fucking around with cagri and upping my reta possibly.
The thought is that reta is already maxing out the pathways every GLP1 drug, so theoretically tirz is pointless. But that's on paper, in practice is it also true that stacking tirz/sema to my Reta won't do as much?
Given what I recently learned about Glucagon agonism's links to cardiac remodeling (hypertrophy, fibrosis, collagen), and the fact there's a pile of drugs involving glucagon that were killed in development because of this, I'm not comfortable suggesting it be combined with anything. If Reta proves to be the safe exception to all the others, which included dual (Glucagon/GLP) and triple (Glucagon/GLP/Tirz) drugs, then it's specific balance between the three agonists is likely key to that long term safety,
Tirz and Sema don't have this problem. In fact they protect the heart against harmful remodeling, and can even reverse it in some cases.
Def worth noting. However from a pure appetite suppression ur probably right to go with the first 2 and mainly sema.Given what I recently learned about Glucagon agonism's links to cardiac remodeling (hypertrophy, fibrosis, collagen), and the fact there's a pile of drugs involving glucagon that were killed in development because of this, I'm not comfortable suggesting it be combined with anything. If Reta proves to be the safe exception to all the others, which included dual (Glucagon/GLP) and triple (Glucagon/GLP/Tirz) drugs, then it's specific balance between the three agonists is likely key to that long term safety,
I don't think it's even safe to assume there's a good sized dose "safety margin" above 12mg like there is with old GLPs.
Tirz and Sema don't have this problem. In fact they protect the heart against harmful remodeling, and can even reverse it in some cases.
IMO, if you're looking for strong appetite suppression, switch to Sema. For slow/non responders, Sema is safe all the way up to 7.2mg per Novo Nordisk's extended trials for larger doses than the original limit of 2.4mg, By 7.2mg there were NO non-responders. Everyone lost substantial amounts of weight (of course most people don't even need 2.4mg to get to their goal weight, but we're talking about the small genetic subset of those who don't respond strongly to GLP class drugs).
Ghoul, I think I’ve read from previous posts this is may be one of the reasons why you don’t take Reta is that right? You’re waiting for final approval? Safety is of upmost importance as well as health. If I choose to go to tirz after Reta how would the dose comparison be? Thanks!
I also agree with ur decision to stay on tirz. As I previously mentioned one of my regrets is using reta and not using smth as strong as tirz. Reta’s only advantage would be it’s metabolic benefits from its glucagon but I feel like it’s overrated/exaggerated.It's hard to make a direct comparison. but it's roughly 20% higher Tirz dose for approximately equivalency.
So Reta to Tirz:
4mg - 5mg
8mg - 10mg
12mg - 15mg
I started on Sema, on the pharma protocol all the way to 2.4mg max.
Then I switched to Tirz (zepbound) as soon as it was released, for its non-alcoholic fatty liver disease benefits, starting at 7.5mg (didn't feel any appetite suppression at all until 10mg.
I've stayed on Tirz because I just didn't see any compelling reports about Reta that made me think it was worth switching. Also, being on pharma Zepbound, UGL Reta was something of a downgrade. I'm really happy with Tirz, and it's done everything I could want from a GLP.
But also, the safety thing was in the back of my mind. GLP has a 30 year track record of use in various forms, GIP a decade. Glucagon, entirely new. I really don't expect any issues to be honest though, and had it been a game changer, I probably would've switched. At this point though, it's off the table. Just not enough compelling reasons to switch, and the safety question make (which may turn out to be a non-issue, we'll see), seals it for me.
I'm still going to follow the next gen GLPs, which are incorporating myostatin inhibition and IGF agonists to promote muscle growth, and may switch in the future,
I also agree with ur decision to stay on tirz. As I previously mentioned one of my regrets is using reta and not using smth as strong as tirz. Reta’s only advantage would be it’s metabolic benefits from its glucagon but I feel like it’s overrated/exaggerated.
Tirz seems to have a way stronger control at BG at lower doses and way stronger appetite. What’s surprising is how much tirz you needed to feel the appetite suppression but I guess ur previous use of Sema, meant you needed a stronger dose to feel similar/stronger effects.
Ofc this is from my perspective, seems like tirz is harder to max out due to reta’s weaker appetite suppression.
But again I am a very bad example to compare as I am a very shitty responder and my sheer will to eat and force food down my throat for my fun, is very bad for anecdotes for the average person to rely on.
How many iu of ghThere's a tiny difference possible between very rapid, and much slower weight loss. 5%, no more than 10% of the determining factors around how much loose skin develops. Even 10% is not particularly noticeable.
70% is down to age, genetics, total volume of weight loss, and how many times skin has been stretched before. All immutable factors.
Most of the rest comes down to exercise and a diet optimized to prevent muscle mass loss and provide sufficient protein for collagen repair,
Most of the casually observed anecdotal "extra" loose skin that's blamed on the speed of loss is actually the muscle mass that's lost with rapid weight loss when exercise and protein intake aren't managed to prevent that from happening, and skin loses the lean mass scaffolding along with fat.
rHGH can really help with this a lot (and TRT). They both shift weight loss to preferentially be fat, stimulate protein synthesis to maintain muscle. GH also speeds skin remodeling, which is ideal when you're shrinking fast.
Personally I think GLPs and rHGH are the perfect combo when losing a lot of weight. Of course, diet (sufficient protein) and exercise make a big difference for the final result too.
It's important to tell anyone you're suggesting this to that the scale won't move as fast as with a GLP alone. Preserving muscle, adding water, mean the numbers go down more slowly, but the recomposition that's going on means they'll look a lot better instead of just getting smaller and softer with muscle loss.
How many iu of gh
i know few guys who are using tirz over reta because tirz brings glucose more down than reta. i know they are all using cgm i can ask them about decrease vs reta if you wantAnyone have CGM data or anecdotes from tirz
Also, being on pharma Zepbound, UGL Reta was something of a downgrade. I'm really happy with Tirz, and it's done everything I could want from a GLP.
