More reta = more fat loss?

Jason_orange12

New Member
Is it as simple as that or not ive seen people saying they have taken more and they can “eat what they want” and lose fat and ive seen others say after the supression goes 15mg does no more than 8mg

What is your experience? If your getting zero appetite suppresion when you up it are you just burning your money?
 
I think I responded to you on another thread. Nevertheless, I don't think you can simply equate increased reta to increased weightloss.

Everyone will react differently, but it will ultimately be a calories in vs calories out type of thing. If Reta is increasing their daily burn that much to allow them to eat all things and still lose, then that person has either good genetics or they are reacting in a advantageous way to the reta (maybe the glucagon agonism). I would also question what people honestly mean by they can "eat what they want"...do these people actually eat that much?

In any case, with grey supply and having a consistent job. I imagine many don't have an issue burning an extra few dollars per pin on some extra mg (Most of my reta supply runs me around .45c/mg or less). The bigger concern to me is whether or not running higher concentrations of a GLP1s is damaging, but personally, I am hoping to taper down on GLP1s once I'm at a healthier goal weight (I am likely the 15mg example that you mentioned :P).
 
Calorie intake is still the dominant driver of fat loss. The glucagon-mediated increase in energy expenditure is real, but modest, and it doesn’t replace the need for a caloric deficit. Once you’re at a dose that lets you hit your target calories with minimal effort, pushing higher gives rapidly diminishing returns.

At higher doses, some people do see slightly higher energy expenditure and better nutrient partitioning, but it’s nowhere near enough to offset uncontrolled intake. If appetite suppression levels off around ~8 mg for you, moving to 12-15 mg is unlikely to meaningfully change fat loss unless it actually changes your eating behavior.

Some people get more appetite suppression at higher doses, others don’t. Once appetite is already low, there’s no extra lever to pull. More drug at that point doesn’t mean more fat loss, just higher cost and higher risk of side effects like GI issues, fatigue, sleep disruption, or elevated heart rate.

Thus, the sensible approach is to use the lowest dose that reliably lets you stick to your calorie target, then let consistency and time do the work. Higher dosing only makes sense if it changes intake or sustainability, not because of theoretical metabolic effects.
 
Is it as simple as that or not ive seen people saying they have taken more and they can “eat what they want” and lose fat and ive seen others say after the supression goes 15mg does no more than 8mg

What is your experience? If your getting zero appetite suppresion when you up it are you just burning your money?
No one says they can eat as much as they want. It isn't a fat burner. It's an appetite suppressant with blood sugar control.
 
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