Tirzepatide problem after first injection!

12o3j129dq

New Member
Hi, I am writing because I had a suspected allergic incident about 1 week ago. Okay, back story, I bought tirzepatide from a seller here. I was previously on Semaglutide and tolerated it well. My dose with sema was 2.5mg. On Sunday I came back from the night shift. I had something on the night shift, but nothing wild. Then I made myself some cereal with a ready made protein drink. Then I injected the Triz under my belly button. I immediately felt my stomach swell up and lots of hard patches formed on my stomach. I felt a little uncomfortable. My body turned red. I was a bit confused and immediately called the emergency doctor. I was then taken to the hospital emergency room. I developed small pustules all over my body. The doctors gave me Fenistil drops and an anti-allergy medication. After a short time, everything had disappeared. Only my face was a little swollen. I have to say that I could breathe without any problems and my mucous membranes were not swollen. My pulse was elevated to 100-110 and my blood pressure was also stable. To be on the safe side, I stayed in hospital for 24 hours. During these 24 hours, I developed migratory hives all over my body, which appeared in some places and then disappeared again. It really covered my whole body. After about 48 hours it was all gone. I still had anti-oedema on my stomach, which went around my stomach like a swimming ring. That is also slowly disappearing.

I think I had an allergic reaction to tirzepatide? What surprises me is that I had no problems with Sema.

The area on my stomach where I had injected was very swollen a few days ago, but with a different peptide. I had injected it into a bloodstream there, but after 12 hours it was all gone again, with no further physical reaction.

How should I proceed, can I throw away the tirzepatide as I am allergic to it anyway? Or do I try an anti-allergic drug in a lower dosage in another part of the abdomen?

Thank you for your help.
 
I used the eoq tirz yesterday and no allergic reaction.
I use original mounjaro and occasionally Opti. This one feel exactly the same. No negative side effects

So I guess in the end you are very allergic to tirzepatide or the water you used.
maybe he buy 1 vial from another dude and try? either he is extremely allergic to tirze or eoq selective scammed him.
 
I used the eoq tirz yesterday and no allergic reaction.
I use original mounjaro and occasionally Opti. This one feel exactly the same. No negative side effects

So I guess in the end you are very allergic to tirzepatide or the water you used.
Water was taken from the second vial and the same reaction occurred. It seems that I am allergic to it. Other forums have also reported positive experiences with EOQ, with no problems with the products. Well, Sema is on its way and I will use that instead.
 
Water was taken from the second vial and the same reaction occurred. It seems that I am allergic to it. Other forums have also reported positive experiences with EOQ, with no problems with the products. Well, Sema is on its way and I will use that instead.
Wondering how that’s going almost all people have zero side effect from tirz but feel lethargic going on the first week of semaglutide.
 
I used the eoq tirz yesterday and no allergic reaction.
I use original mounjaro and occasionally Opti. This one feel exactly the same. No negative side effects

So I guess in the end you are very allergic to tirzepatide or the water you used.
Hey, when did you order it? I ordered 30 vials in may, and havn't tested it yet as they exit scammed. However I'd like to know if the pre exit scam stuff is legit.

Edit: I've seen the picture of your tirz in the other thread. It's weird, my vials caps are red, without label and have been delivered without the packaging you have...
 

Attachments

  • IMG_4810.webp
    IMG_4810.webp
    207.6 KB · Views: 11
Last edited:
My girlfriend took half a pill yesterday and it kept her appetite suppressed very well.
We'll see how it progresses and I'll comment on the forum.

Bro, it's a scam.

Worse, if she really is experiencing appetite suppression and not a placebo effect, it's some undisclosed compound other than Tirz or any other GLP.
 
Bro, it's a scam.

Worse, if she really is experiencing appetite suppression and not a placebo effect, it's some undisclosed compound other than Tirz or any other GLP.
Damn... I read about the GI tract degradation and all the other reviews about why they don't work orally.
Thanks brother, I learned something valuable today.
 
Damn... I read about the GI tract degradation and all the other reviews about why they don't work orally.
Thanks brother, I learned something valuable today.

An oral GLP would be an absolute goldmine. Stocks skyrocket when there's even a rumor of a practical oral formulation.

Injections are the only thing preventing tens of millions more people from buying pharma GLPs.

Consider this, Rybelesus, Novo Nordisk oral Semaglutide.

$1,000 / month. 14mg Semaglutide per tablet, daily.

Molecules are encapsulated in a protective coating to prevent stomach acid from destroying.

A special excipient, SNAC, deploys in the intestines, to open pores in the lining to allow Semaglutide to be absorbed.

14mg x 7 is 98mg of Semaglutide.

And the end result is the equivalent of 0.5mg Semaglutide injected once a week.

So for 1mg of active Semaglutide it takes 200mg delivered orally and an extremely difficult to manufacture tablet.

Tirz is an even bigger molecule, and Novo says they're years away from making it work orally,

So yeah, any UGL, or compounding pharmacy "oral GLP" is a scam.
 
An oral GLP would be an absolute goldmine. Stocks skyrocket when there's even a rumor of a practical oral formulation.

Injections are the only thing preventing tens of millions more people from buying pharma GLPs.

Consider this, Rybelesus, Novo Nordisk oral Semaglutide.

$1,000 / month. 14mg Semaglutide per tablet, daily.

Molecules are encapsulated in a protective coating to prevent stomach acid from destroying.

A special excipient, SNAC, deploys in the intestines, to open pores in the lining to allow Semaglutide to be absorbed.

14mg x 7 is 98mg of Semaglutide.

And the end result is the equivalent of 0.5mg Semaglutide injected once a week.

So for 1mg of active Semaglutide it takes 200mg delivered orally and an extremely difficult to manufacture tablet.

Tirz is an even bigger molecule, and Novo says they're years away from making it work orally,

So yeah, any UGL, or compounding pharmacy "oral GLP" is a scam.
You have given me a magnificent class brother! (applause)
Thank you very much!
With this I am 100% left that I have been scammed.
I threw 300 dollars in the trash u.u
 
You have given me a magnificent class brother! (applause)
Thank you very much!
With this I am 100% left that I have been scammed.
I threw 300 dollars in the trash u.u

Sorry to hear it. Tell her you'll give her the injection, that it will be painless, with a 31g 6mm needle that's less than a mosquito bite.

Point out diabetic children inject themselves daily,
 
Back
Top