Good-Heart6425
GLP-1 Apprentice
Opinion | I No Longer Think GLP-1s Are the Answer
The drugs 'work' but may be working against us long-term
I hate to say it... I agree. After being on sema, and stacking others, I had to stop for 8 weeks as I had scheduled surgeries.. one that got pushed back two weeks. I had stopped a few other times but for only a week or two due to surgeries and colonoscopies.![]()
Opinion | I No Longer Think GLP-1s Are the Answer
The drugs 'work' but may be working against us long-termwww.medpagetoday.com
Blood pressure meds, cholesterol meds, blood sugar control meds are also long-term use. Reta offers the potential ability for many to just consolidate that into a singular med.All types of issues with the article, but I guess for me, I always thought that long-term use of a glp-1 was going to be required. In my mind, glp-1 medications treat an underlying metabolic disease and none of the glp-1s are cure for that disease. For me, I think if I stopped taking the medication, I would fully expect my symptoms (ravenous hunger, weight, joint pain, etc.) to return with a raging vengance. And even this go around with weight loss I've done nutrition counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy, and adjusted my behaviors, I honestly don't think that's going to "cure" bad physiology.
Statins were found to significantly decrease naturally occurring GLP-1 levels (in addition to previously having been found to increase diabetes risk and increase plaque calcification). Not sure how that would affect GLP-1RA efficacy, unless you're saying they'd make it harder for someone to maintain a weight loss after going off GLP1 drugs.I read recently that cholesterol meds, ie statins reduce glp1 efficacy.
As much as I am benefiting from these drugs, I could never do it without overeaters anonymous. I have been in that program for 16 years, and it changed my life. Even before the drugs, food noise was hugely diminished, and I had been at a stable weight for 14 years. Never perfect and it required constant spiritual work, but it changed my life. I started taking GLP because of menopause and an auto immune disorder that made my metabolism come to a screeching halt. I think most people who try to stop who had chronic issues with food addiction will definitely have trouble keeping the weight off.
This is just in relation to the image under this statement, not the comment itself.Thanks for sharing. It's good to hear other perspectives, but I don't find this guy particularly persuasive.
He cites is own personal anecdotal evidence and a study from several years ago that had been superceded by more recent and comprehensive research. This isnt to say that people don't come off of glps and gain back all their weight. That obviously happens, and I am sure it is unbelievably frustrating for those folks. But he asserts that as the norm, and it doesn't look like that is factually correct.
I misread it, thanksStatins were found to significantly decrease naturally occurring GLP-1 levels (in addition to previously having been found to increase diabetes risk and increase plaque calcification). Not sure how that would affect GLP-1RA efficacy, unless you're saying they'd make it harder for someone to maintain a weight loss after going off GLP1 drugs.