Is titrating up too fast unsafe?

Some just know everything.
Well deserved. I went on the standard quick Zepbound titrate and that was rough once I got to 7.5. OP is doing much faster with a bigger hammer. Of course there is weight loss, but how do we know the loss wouldn’t be the same at lower doses? I guess with no sides it’s no big deal, but why run out of runway so quickly?
 
In general what you are saying is not consistent with the research or how reta works.

Okay, let's talk about the numbers:

1781416336518.webp

I think this is the chart everyone knows. Let's start from the beginning, at weeks 4 and 8. Why did participants on a higher dose show greater weight loss even at week 4? I'm not buying that it was solely due to stronger appetite suppression. Or look at the 6-month mark / week 24, where the higher doses outperform the 1 mg dose, which plateaued at nearly 8.7% between 6 and 12 Month.

That's why I want to get as soon as possible to the 4mg / week. Pinning 2x a week 2mg. And the plan was to start today with 2mg. But I just increased the dose from 1.5mg to 1.75mg. To see, if everything is fine. And next time I will go up again 0.25mg.
 
What are the risks of titrating up too fast on reta? I’m a big guy with super severe craving. My first week I pinned 1mg. Second week I did 2mg. Aside from one day feeling more full than normal, I have not had any real effects - good or bad.

What risks am I running if I were too inject 3mg for my third shot? Am I being too impatient and just need to give the drug time to work?
appetite suppression didn’t happen for me until I got to 6, so I added a little tirz mid week
 
when you hit the wall of GI just slow down and stick to single pin weekly
go with what your body tells you
but when you hit 6mg/8Mg stick as long you can at that dose if you get the desired effect
then titrate up only when hunger is uncontrolable
you can even pin a 2.5 tirz 4 days after your reta shot to keep the last days smooth as butter
but dont rush to 12 mg cause even at 12mg you will hit a wall of your body ajusting and you will need more
at some point GLp1 are your tools to stick to your health diet and not binge eating at night and loose all your progress not just skip eating
hit your steps and do your resistance training 3/4 days a week

its not a sprint
its a freaking long marathon of changing habits etc
Good luck on your journey
its one hell of a ride !
 
What are the risks of titrating up too fast on reta? I’m a big guy with super severe craving. My first week I pinned 1mg. Second week I did 2mg. Aside from one day feeling more full than normal, I have not had any real effects - good or bad.

What risks am I running if I were too inject 3mg for my third shot? Am I being too impatient and just need to give the drug time to work?
1 week on the bathroom puking from every hole
i called it the diarrheatrutide !!! 🤢💩🤢💩😱😨😰😭🤯
 
Starting at one then going to three after some weeks isn't too crazy imho. Main risk is temporary GI issues; severe bloating and diarrhea. Not going to die, but is not going to be fun at all. Why people just say go slowly. But 1 to 2 to 3 isn't too crazy an increase imho.
 
Okay, let's talk about the numbers:

View attachment 27416

I think this is the chart everyone knows. Let's start from the beginning, at weeks 4 and 8. Why did participants on a higher dose show greater weight loss even at week 4? I'm not buying that it was solely due to stronger appetite suppression. Or look at the 6-month mark / week 24, where the higher doses outperform the 1 mg dose, which plateaued at nearly 8.7% between 6 and 12 Month.

That's why I want to get as soon as possible to the 4mg / week. Pinning 2x a week 2mg. And the plan was to start today with 2mg. But I just increased the dose from 1.5mg to 1.75mg. To see, if everything is fine. And next time I will go up again 0.25mg.
There are 2 issues I see with your logic. One is that until you start taking the drug you have no idea what doses will do what in you. Effects and side effects from reta or other GLP's are really quite individual and variable, and you have to adjust dose increases based on effects and side effects, and guess at what the higher dose might or might not do based on what is happening at the current dose.

The other is that there are no plateaus anywhere on that graph, yes weight loss rates are definitely slowing down at 12 months, but the real plateau is not till well after a year on reta, and max weight loss is higher at that time 29%, not 24.2% for 12mg. Unless for some special reason you want to start losing the weight fast, I do not see any real advantage in rapid titration of doses, as it does carry higher risks of sudden severe side effects. The difference in weight loss on that graph with faster ramping of doses are at most 1-2%, so fairly small. And rapid initial weight loss can cause problems, mainly extreme fatigue and faintness, but also might make gallstones more likely.

It is worth knowing that significant side effects starting and increasing doses are very common with any GLP, At least 50% get nausea and vomiting, and there is also constipation diarrhoea, and with reta increased heart rate and weird skin sensory symptoms.

Despite that your dose increase scheme is actually pretty safeish, mainly as you are doing twice weekly dosing, as each smaller dose is less of a jump up , blood level rises are less dramatic, and it should only take half a week for levels to drop to pre dose levels, compared to a whole week if dosing is weekly , so if unpleasant side effects happen, they won't last as long. And the more graduated build up in doses is more likely to give you a better indication of what is likely to happen next time you increase the dose, which makes it easier to determine if it is a good idea or not. But there is still the build up of blood levels over 4 weeks at the same weekly dose, so side effects can still be unpredictable. And using glp plotter is always a good idea.
 
Question. Is there an ideal receptor concentration that subjects are trying to reach and maintain for something like reta? It's fun playing with the plotter but looking for this missing piece of information. Thanks.
I've done a lot of research—read studies, looked into the medical data and science, and also gathered user experiences alongside my own observations. For me, a dosage of around 4 mg/week (or 2 mg twice a week) seems like a nice sweet spot to escalate to, and then to maintain for as long as possible—possibly even combined with cagrilintide or low-dose triz.

The 4 mg/week mark seems to be a good spot where people lose weight, fat, and liver fat at a reasonable pace—not too slow, but not too fast either. And from there, there's plenty of room to escalate to 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9 mg/week if the effects start to flatten out, as well as room to combine it with other peptides like the ones I mentioned.
 
For me, a dosage of around 4 mg/week (or 2 mg twice a week) seems like a nice sweet spot to escalate to, and then to maintain for as long as possible—possibly even combined with cagrilintide or low-dose triz.
Doesn't the fact that so many people are combining GLP-1s tell us that they're underdosing their original GLP-1?
 
Doesn't the fact that so many people are combining GLP-1s tell us that they're underdosing their original GLP-1?
I would not phrase it that way. Well, I never saw some one combining Semaglutide with something else. Why? Because on Semaglutide you have the maximal appetite suppression. Reta triggers the same receptors at a much lower rate. So the hunger suppression on Reta is much less.

For some people it might be enough, for others maybe not. Some people might be comfortable with having hunger. Other know that when they enter a supermarket, they will buy some stupid things.

From this point of view, it just makes sense to create your own individual medicine with a combination that suits the personal situation.
 

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