Auto immune and Tirz plus Reta discussion

tracylynn

GLP-1 Apprentice
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Short story for joint pain - I'm on 8mg of Reta. I'm considering adding a low dose of Tirzep to see if it can help more with joint pain.

Details - I was on Tirzepatide for 6 months and had such an amazing impact on my auto immune disease. Giving me so much relief for inflammation, arthritis, and joint pain. Of course it brought my cortisol levels down really quickly and plus I lost 40 lbs.
Unfortunately, I could no longer get it from my local compound pharmacy and I had to come off of it. That is when I started getting into other peptides and the grey market.

Fast forward 4 months, I had decided to give Reta, LipoC, and KLOW a try. I'm finally on 8mg a week of Reta (2nd week of 8mg felt like it kicked in) but not seeing improvement on the joint pain and swelling. To me it doesn't work like Tirz so I still have a bit of food noise too. Not losing weight but not gaining.
My focus is more about getting relief from the pain and feeling better. I just wonder if there is a reason I shouldn't try a low does of Tirz in the middle of the week to see if it can help my auto immune issues.

Thoughts?
 
Tirz and Reta did nothing for my rheumatoid arthritis. The only thing that helped me was a biologic, Enbrel. And it took about 3 months of Enbrel to feel the difference. So if you are having a lot of joint pain you may want to consider that.
 
just wonder if there is a reason I shouldn't try a low does of Tirz in the middle of the week to see if it can help my auto immune issues.
Sounds fine to me. People do it and seem fine.

This is where I go off a cliff though:

Maybe the GLP aspect of the tirz was helping you the most for your inflammation? Though GIP is anti-inflammatory too, with synergistic effects. At least for you so far, the glucagon aspect of reta may be not as helpful or could even be slightly counterproductive.
 
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Hmmm... this is good (or bad) information for me since I'm just starting the switch to reta from compounded tirz. One of the things I like most is the anti-inflammatory effects since I'm basically at GW. I had assumed the GIP was doing the job, but reading up on it, looks like the cytokine (non-gut) effects are more pronounced for GLP1. Well, hopefully my research turns out well, and this new knowledge doesn't require blinding. I guess I'll just shut my eyes when I do it and see if that helps.
 
Sounds fine to me. People do it and seem fine.

This is where I go off a cliff though:

Maybe the GLP aspect of the tirz was helping you the most for your inflammation? Though GIP is anti-inflammatory too, with synergistic effects. At least for you so far, the glucagon aspect of reta may be not as helpful or could even be slightly counterproductive.

Interesting. What would make it counterproductive? Or when you say counterproductive do you think it can actually make it a little worse?

Seems like I came across someone else saying it was not good for auto immune but I did not see the source as a reliable source. Now I'm wondering if they are right. Maybe I need to go back to Tirz.
 
Tirz and Reta did nothing for my rheumatoid arthritis. The only thing that helped me was a biologic, Enbrel. And it took about 3 months of Enbrel to feel the difference. So if you are having a lot of joint pain you may want to consider that.
I've spent several years trying different ones, going down the whole biologic path, and I'm still currently on one but it's never helped with out me adding all kinds of other meds like prednisone, over the counter pain meds, or sometimes prescription pain meds....it's been a journey. Then I got on Triz and I no longer needed anything else but the weekly injection and the biologic every 8 weeks. My goal is to get back to that because now I'm having flair ups again. 🙁
 
Interesting. What would make it counterproductive? Or when you say counterproductive do you think it can actually make it a little worse?

Seems like I came across someone else saying it was not good for auto immune but I did not see the source as a reliable source. Now I'm wondering if they are right. Maybe I need to go back to Tirz.

It's more in theory since reta was designed to balance all that out.

But speculation with Google Gemini:

It's possible that the systemic metabolic changes induced by strong GCGR activation could, in some individuals, alter the delicate balance of inflammatory mediators, leading to or exacerbating joint pain. The precise nature of this interaction is not fully understood, and more research would be needed to confirm it.
 
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