GLP-1 receptor agonists + Berberine contraindicated?

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I am thinking of researching a combination of Retatrutide 8mg weekly and Berberine 1500mg daily. My RS has concerns about potential for hypoglycemic interactions. Do any of you have experience with this combination or something similar to share? TIA.

Scholarly articles about the positive outcomes from 900-1500mg Berberine daily:
  1. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2410097/ — Pilot RCT (type 2 diabetes): berberine (1.5 g/day) lowered fasting glucose, post-meal glucose, and HbA1c similarly to metformin and improved lipids; GI side effects were common but transient.
  2. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15531889/ — Nat Med 2004 (hypercholesterolemia): 3 months oral berberine reduced total cholesterol ~29%, triglycerides ~35%, and LDL ~25% in humans and upregulated LDL receptor expression in liver cells/animals.
  3. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23118793/ — Systematic review & meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): pooled RCTs show berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c, and improves lipids versus control, supporting its glucose- and lipid-lowering effects.
  4. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.1015045/full — Systematic review & meta-analysis (2022): berberine consistently reduces fasting glucose, HbA1c, triglycerides and LDL; authors note heterogeneity between trials and recommend larger high-quality studies.
  5. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37522683/ — RCT of a phytosome (enhanced-absorption) berberine in overweight people with impaired fasting glucose: the phytosome formula (550 mg ×2/day) improved fasting glucose, insulin, lipids and reduced visceral fat versus placebo over ~60 days.
  6. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4923/15/11/2567 — Pharmacokinetic study of a new berberine formulation: the micellar/liposomal-style formulation raised plasma berberine AUC ~6–10× versus unformulated berberine in healthy volunteers, improving absorption and tolerability.
  7. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38016844/ — Umbrella meta-analysis of RCTs: across multiple meta-analyses, berberine improves glycemic control and reduces inflammatory biomarkers in metabolic disorders, reinforcing consistent metabolic benefits.
  8. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36467075/ — 2022 meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c and improves lipid profiles; authors highlight short trial durations and call for longer, larger RCTs.
 
I think berberine lowers the bloodsugar ? so why would you use it with reta ?
I appreciate your response, but I’d like to keep this thread focused on gathering firsthand or verified reports from others who have combined Retatrutide with Berberine. I’m not looking to debate the overall value of this line of research.

My research subject is already taking Berberine instead of metformin and has seen positive results in blood sugar control, cholesterol and triglyceride reduction, and lower inflammation. Some published animal studies suggest Berberine might help preserve muscle during weight loss, which could work well with Retatrutide’s fat-loss effect. The two compounds appear to act through related but distinct metabolic pathways, so they may support each other’s benefits.

The main risks I’m watching are potential liver strain and low blood sugar. My goal is to collect enough real-world data and observations to weigh whether keeping Berberine in the protocol makes sense while introducing Retatrutide, or if it’s safer to stop Berberine during that phase.
 
I am thinking of researching a combination of Retatrutide 8mg weekly and Berberine 1500mg daily. My RS has concerns about potential for hypoglycemic interactions. Do any of you have experience with this combination or something similar to share? TIA.

Scholarly articles about the positive outcomes from 900-1500mg Berberine daily:
  1. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2410097/ — Pilot RCT (type 2 diabetes): berberine (1.5 g/day) lowered fasting glucose, post-meal glucose, and HbA1c similarly to metformin and improved lipids; GI side effects were common but transient.
  2. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15531889/ — Nat Med 2004 (hypercholesterolemia): 3 months oral berberine reduced total cholesterol ~29%, triglycerides ~35%, and LDL ~25% in humans and upregulated LDL receptor expression in liver cells/animals.
  3. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23118793/ — Systematic review & meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): pooled RCTs show berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c, and improves lipids versus control, supporting its glucose- and lipid-lowering effects.
  4. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.1015045/full — Systematic review & meta-analysis (2022): berberine consistently reduces fasting glucose, HbA1c, triglycerides and LDL; authors note heterogeneity between trials and recommend larger high-quality studies.
  5. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37522683/ — RCT of a phytosome (enhanced-absorption) berberine in overweight people with impaired fasting glucose: the phytosome formula (550 mg ×2/day) improved fasting glucose, insulin, lipids and reduced visceral fat versus placebo over ~60 days.
  6. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4923/15/11/2567 — Pharmacokinetic study of a new berberine formulation: the micellar/liposomal-style formulation raised plasma berberine AUC ~6–10× versus unformulated berberine in healthy volunteers, improving absorption and tolerability.
  7. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38016844/ — Umbrella meta-analysis of RCTs: across multiple meta-analyses, berberine improves glycemic control and reduces inflammatory biomarkers in metabolic disorders, reinforcing consistent metabolic benefits.
  8. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36467075/ — 2022 meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c and improves lipid profiles; authors highlight short trial durations and call for longer, larger RCTs.
I’m willing to try it with you at 1,200mg/day. I tend to be a hyper-responder with everything and will be a good at tracking side effects. Give me a week to get off everything else (GHK-Cu, NAD+, Sema).

I never eat breakfast anyway and can commit to at least 12-16 weeks. Do I need a continuous blood glucose monitor? The Stelo from Dexcom is $100/month.
 
I’m willing to try it with you at 1,200mg/day. I tend to be a hyper-responder with everything and will be a good at tracking side effects. Give me a week to get off everything else (GHK-Cu, NAD+, Sema).

I never eat breakfast anyway and can commit to at least 12-16 weeks. Do I need a continuous blood glucose monitor? The Stelo from Dexcom is $100/month.
Have you noticed any positives with NAD+, if so what were your dosages like?

I got a kit of it on the way and looking forward to blasting off once it gets in!
 
I’m willing to try it with you at 1,200mg/day. I tend to be a hyper-responder with everything and will be a good at tracking side effects. Give me a week to get off everything else (GHK-Cu, NAD+, Sema).

I never eat breakfast anyway and can commit to at least 12-16 weeks. Do I need a continuous blood glucose monitor? The Stelo from Dexcom is $100/month.
You don’t need to do that, although I appreciate the sentiment. I’m not going do it without at least one person out here who has tried it with no consequences.
 
Have you noticed any positives with NAD+, if so what were your dosages like?

I got a kit of it on the way and looking forward to blasting off once it gets in!
Both hubs and I do NAD+ nearly daily even though we are both under the age where it has the biggest impact. I take .5mg, he takes 1mg - I don’t notice a night an day difference because I’ve been on it since I stopped nursing my youngest. I’ll definitely let you know if I notice a difference not being on it though. I absolutely notice a difference with GHK-Cu/GLOW. I just feel my skin is brighter all over. Paired with a healthy diet and good skin hygiene it’s great for looking good. I noticed small scars are nearly non-existent. I’ll DM you a before and after of when I chopped my finger trimming hedges and you can judge for yourself.
 
I am thinking of researching a combination of Retatrutide 8mg weekly and Berberine 1500mg daily. My RS has concerns about potential for hypoglycemic interactions. Do any of you have experience with this combination or something similar to share? TIA.

Scholarly articles about the positive outcomes from 900-1500mg Berberine daily:
  1. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2410097/ — Pilot RCT (type 2 diabetes): berberine (1.5 g/day) lowered fasting glucose, post-meal glucose, and HbA1c similarly to metformin and improved lipids; GI side effects were common but transient.
  2. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15531889/ — Nat Med 2004 (hypercholesterolemia): 3 months oral berberine reduced total cholesterol ~29%, triglycerides ~35%, and LDL ~25% in humans and upregulated LDL receptor expression in liver cells/animals.
  3. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23118793/ — Systematic review & meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): pooled RCTs show berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c, and improves lipids versus control, supporting its glucose- and lipid-lowering effects.
  4. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.1015045/full — Systematic review & meta-analysis (2022): berberine consistently reduces fasting glucose, HbA1c, triglycerides and LDL; authors note heterogeneity between trials and recommend larger high-quality studies.
  5. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37522683/ — RCT of a phytosome (enhanced-absorption) berberine in overweight people with impaired fasting glucose: the phytosome formula (550 mg ×2/day) improved fasting glucose, insulin, lipids and reduced visceral fat versus placebo over ~60 days.
  6. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4923/15/11/2567 — Pharmacokinetic study of a new berberine formulation: the micellar/liposomal-style formulation raised plasma berberine AUC ~6–10× versus unformulated berberine in healthy volunteers, improving absorption and tolerability.
  7. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38016844/ — Umbrella meta-analysis of RCTs: across multiple meta-analyses, berberine improves glycemic control and reduces inflammatory biomarkers in metabolic disorders, reinforcing consistent metabolic benefits.
  8. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36467075/ — 2022 meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c and improves lipid profiles; authors highlight short trial durations and call for longer, larger RCTs.

Firstly to answer your question, no, I haven't tried that combo. Berberine is quite awesome though and very well studied.

I say go for it if you want to, with a few considerations.

1. If there is any slowing of GI emptying with your reta, that would theoretically leave berberine in the GI tract longer, and thus increase its chances of absorption. Not a bad thing given its relatively low bioavailability.

2. Berberine at high doses has been reported to cause GI symptoms, which incretin drugs can, too.

3. It might cause hypoglycemia. Berberine is a pretty potent hyopglycemic agent on its own, but one of its proposed mechanisms is to inhibit DPP-IV, which favors endogenous incretin release.

All that to say, if I were going to research this combo, I'd probably start at a lower dose of around 500mg/day, see how that does, and move forward accordingly.
 
C
Both hubs and I do NAD+ nearly daily even though we are both under the age where it has the biggest impact. I take .5mg, he takes 1mg - I don’t notice a night an day difference because I’ve been on it since I stopped nursing my youngest. I’ll definitely let you know if I notice a difference not being on it though. I absolutely notice a difference with GHK-Cu/GLOW. I just feel my skin is brighter all over. Paired with a healthy diet and good skin hygiene it’s great for looking good. I noticed small scars are nearly non-existent. I’ll DM you a before and after of when I chopped my finger trimming hedges and you can judge for yourself.
Cool, thanks for the info.
 
I think Retatrutide works the best
 
I take reta + berberine and have for about two months now with no ill effects. I took 2.1mg reta 2x per week through August with 1200mg berberine. Took a mix of tirz 3.3mg/reta 2.25mg in September with it. Didn't take berberine in October due to some medical testing I was having done, and am now back on it with only reta (tirz is still leaving my system). I will be upping my dose of reta to 3mg 2x per week starting with my Wednesday pinning. I take the berberine in the morning with most of my other supplements. Occasionally take it at night if I've had a lot of sugar (like Halloween night).

I'm late middle aged and have tested as pre-diabetic since my teens. In early July my A1C was 6.1 I think, in late August when I gave blood it was 5.7 and as of early October it was 5.4. My fasting insulin is still on the higher side though (14.x) so I'm going to keep taking it for a while. My liver enzymes were normal for the first time ever, as well. Some of that was probably due to learning that you should take a few extra days off from working out prior to the blood draw.
 
have been on berberine 1200mg daily for years and A1C always hung around 6.1. Liver enzymes suggested fatty liver and abnormal fasting glucose. Started Reta 8mg with the berberine in Feb. Now down 95lbs with no side effects. LFT's have normalized and A1C now around 4.5. Able to D/c blood pressure meds but still need CPAP. Cholesterol & triglycerides also normalized so am going to taper off statins.
 
have been on berberine 1200mg daily for years and A1C always hung around 6.1. Liver enzymes suggested fatty liver and abnormal fasting glucose. Started Reta 8mg with the berberine in Feb. Now down 95lbs with no side effects. LFT's have normalized and A1C now around 4.5. Able to D/c blood pressure meds but still need CPAP. Cholesterol & triglycerides also normalized so am going to taper off statins.
Awesome! I sincerely appreciate the engagement. I’m researching Retatrutide and other supplements in an attempt to keep my RS from having to go on statins, metformin, etc. Retatrutide alone is causing fatigue, skin sensitivity, and some muscle/joint soreness. Chronic sacrum, hip, low back nerve pain has 90% reduced however and as of this morning their weight is down 3% in 3 weeks. So we don’t want to increase fatigue and are worried Berberine might do that. Retatrutide was started during a lapse of their normal Berberine supplement, which as mentioned has improved their blood work materially.
 
I take slow release dihydroberberine 150mg twice a day and berberine 500mg with dinner. Reta 4mg every 5 days. I also take Hgh 4iu every night. Im also careful with my diet. I don’t do keto but I watch my carb intake. I’ve never had hypoglycemia. I frequently check morning fasting blood sugar. It’s always 82-94. A1C perfect.
 
I take reta + berberine and have for about two months now with no ill effects. I took 2.1mg reta 2x per week through August with 1200mg berberine. Took a mix of tirz 3.3mg/reta 2.25mg in September with it. Didn't take berberine in October due to some medical testing I was having done, and am now back on it with only reta (tirz is still leaving my system). I will be upping my dose of reta to 3mg 2x per week starting with my Wednesday pinning. I take the berberine in the morning with most of my other supplements. Occasionally take it at night if I've had a lot of sugar (like Halloween night).

I'm late middle aged and have tested as pre-diabetic since my teens. In early July my A1C was 6.1 I think, in late August when I gave blood it was 5.7 and as of early October it was 5.4. My fasting insulin is still on the higher side though (14.x) so I'm going to keep taking it for a while. My liver enzymes were normal for the first time ever, as well. Some of that was probably due to learning that you should take a few extra days off from working out prior to the blood draw.
Sounds like a familiar story, my RS is pre-diabetic, high triglycerides and LDL. Hoping his next annual WellCare visit yields similar reductions from the GLP triple agonist. I appreciate your data sharing! Every experience helps.
 
Sounds like a familiar story, my RS is pre-diabetic, high triglycerides and LDL. Hoping his next annual WellCare visit yields similar reductions from the GLP triple agonist. I appreciate your data sharing! Every experience helps.

Yeah my cholesterol levels were highish and are improving, but not normal yet. I went from something like 180 LDL, 135 trig, 31 HDL to 140 LDL 110 trig and 34 HDL as of the last bloodwork. I'll be checking again in early December.
 
I’m going back on the berberine this week. Not the higher dose I was using before Reta, but 500 at dinner and see how it goes.
 
I’ve been on Reta since May and berberine for about a month. I added berberine after I upped my hgh to 4iu a couple months ago just to hopefully keep insulin sensitivity on point and blood sugar lower.

In July I got bloodwork done and glucose was 70 with just Reta. I got bloodwork done about a week after starting berberine and glucose was 59. I don’t really know if berberine is responsible for the lower reading, but 59 is below reference range.

I’m not sure I feel symptoms of hypoglycemia tho. Sometimes in the morning I feel light headed like when standing up quickly, but I’ve always felt that way. Maybe I’ve always been slightly hypo? Idk it doesn’t really bother me so I don’t give it much thought.
 
I've been taking berberine since before I started reta. I don't think I've noticed any adverse effects, though I'm only taking 500mg of berberine in the evening.

I'm currently taking 750mcg of reta 3x per week and I'm about to start titrating my dosage down since I've gone past my goal weight and looking to make some progress in the gym over the winter.
 
The hypoglycemia risk is specific to those who are injecting insulin or who are taking drugs (like sulfonylureas) that specifically force your pancreas to release excessive amounts of insulin. It's not that being a diabetic puts you at greater risk of hypoglycemia, it's that diabetics are going to be the only people injecting insulin or taking those particular drugs. If for some reason a non-diabetic started injecting insulin or taking sulfonylureas, they'd be at the same risk of hypoglycemia.

When it comes to healthcare workers, they recognize that if they're not working with diabetes prescriptions every day, it's often easier to just remember "some diabetes drugs can cause hypoglycemia" and "when I'm messing with diabetes prescriptions I'm going to be sure to look up which ones can do that and refresh my memory then to avoid problems." That often translates into telling patients "if you're a diabetic watch out for hypoglycemia," whether such a statement makes any sense or not.

This is going to get well outside of the original questions, but another fun fact: If someone is in deep ketosis, hypoglycemia is surprisingly not a cause for concern and blood sugar can be brought to very low levels without any ill effects observed. I'd never recommend trying this yourself, but in the 1970s they did research studies on this specific phenomena. They fasted subjects for 2 months (yes, months) and then administered insulin to them to see what would happen. They saw blood sugar levels as low as 9 mg/dL as the subjects remained alert and responsive, which is absolutely bonkers. Here's the study in case anyone else finds such things interesting:
 
I am thinking of researching a combination of Retatrutide 8mg weekly and Berberine 1500mg daily. My RS has concerns about potential for hypoglycemic interactions. Do any of you have experience with this combination or something similar to share? TIA.

Scholarly articles about the positive outcomes from 900-1500mg Berberine daily:
  1. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2410097/ — Pilot RCT (type 2 diabetes): berberine (1.5 g/day) lowered fasting glucose, post-meal glucose, and HbA1c similarly to metformin and improved lipids; GI side effects were common but transient.
  2. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15531889/ — Nat Med 2004 (hypercholesterolemia): 3 months oral berberine reduced total cholesterol ~29%, triglycerides ~35%, and LDL ~25% in humans and upregulated LDL receptor expression in liver cells/animals.
  3. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23118793/ — Systematic review & meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): pooled RCTs show berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c, and improves lipids versus control, supporting its glucose- and lipid-lowering effects.
  4. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.1015045/full — Systematic review & meta-analysis (2022): berberine consistently reduces fasting glucose, HbA1c, triglycerides and LDL; authors note heterogeneity between trials and recommend larger high-quality studies.
  5. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37522683/ — RCT of a phytosome (enhanced-absorption) berberine in overweight people with impaired fasting glucose: the phytosome formula (550 mg ×2/day) improved fasting glucose, insulin, lipids and reduced visceral fat versus placebo over ~60 days.
  6. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4923/15/11/2567 — Pharmacokinetic study of a new berberine formulation: the micellar/liposomal-style formulation raised plasma berberine AUC ~6–10× versus unformulated berberine in healthy volunteers, improving absorption and tolerability.
  7. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38016844/ — Umbrella meta-analysis of RCTs: across multiple meta-analyses, berberine improves glycemic control and reduces inflammatory biomarkers in metabolic disorders, reinforcing consistent metabolic benefits.
  8. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36467075/ — 2022 meta-analysis (type 2 diabetes): berberine significantly lowers fasting glucose, HbA1c and improves lipid profiles; authors highlight short trial durations and call for longer, larger RCTs.
This was a while ago but curious how it went. I’ve been on Reta for a couple weeks carnivore diet, I’ve noticed that my blood sugar seems a bit higher on Reta than it was with diet alone. Though I wasn’t losing any weight but I’ve never had fasting insulin taken which I’m guessing was high and probably causing the weight loss resistance. Was thinking the berberine could be helpful dropping my bs so hopefully my ketones would go back up Reta has seemed to lower those too, though could be from the higher glucose.
 
This was a while ago but curious how it went. I’ve been on Reta for a couple weeks carnivore diet, I’ve noticed that my blood sugar seems a bit higher on Reta than it was with diet alone. Though I wasn’t losing any weight but I’ve never had fasting insulin taken which I’m guessing was high and probably causing the weight loss resistance. Was thinking the berberine could be helpful dropping my bs so hopefully my ketones would go back up Reta has seemed to lower those too, though could be from the higher glucose.
That's an interesting place to be coming from and surprised to hear you're seeing a blood sugar increase with reta.

For me personally carnivore (vs keto or even sloppy low-carb) was a weight gain diet. I guess that shouldn't really be a surprise and I suspect that most of the people who lost weight on carnivore did so because they went straight there from a standard American diet VS losing weight with something else first.
 
That's an interesting place to be coming from and surprised to hear you're seeing a blood sugar increase with reta.

For me personally carnivore (vs keto or even sloppy low-carb) was a weight gain diet. I guess that shouldn't really be a surprise and I suspect that most of the people who lost weight on carnivore did so because they went straight there from a standard American diet VS losing weight with something else first.
So I was too. I mean I understand that glucagon tells the liver to release glucose. I’m not sure if that’s it. I’m definitely insulin resistant. Never T2 diabetic. I caught it and have been working on it for years. Definitely mitochondrial dysfunction which I’ve also worked at. I am wondering if it has to do with an issue or not enough nad+ or rather an inverted ratio of nadH to nad+. I had gotten seriously ill a couple years ago, and was really depleted from fighting it. From what I’m learning still could be an issue with insulin amd glucose handling. Maybe glycation end products. As far as my diet before carnivore I was low carb just really respond poorly to more. Could be damage from years of restrictive dieting and then periods of whatever goes. Health is such a puzzle. I’m considering a protocol of nad+ then ss-31 amd then motsc and run and all through and the others consecutively. If you have any thoughts or experience I’m open!
 
So I was too. I mean I understand that glucagon tells the liver to release glucose. I’m not sure if that’s it. I’m definitely insulin resistant. Never T2 diabetic. I caught it and have been working on it for years. Definitely mitochondrial dysfunction which I’ve also worked at. I am wondering if it has to do with an issue or not enough nad+ or rather an inverted ratio of nadH to nad+. I had gotten seriously ill a couple years ago, and was really depleted from fighting it. From what I’m learning still could be an issue with insulin amd glucose handling. Maybe glycation end products. As far as my diet before carnivore I was low carb just really respond poorly to more. Could be damage from years of restrictive dieting and then periods of whatever goes. Health is such a puzzle. I’m considering a protocol of nad+ then ss-31 amd then motsc and run and all through and the others consecutively. If you have any thoughts or experience I’m open!
You're right that the increase in glucagon (really glucagon agonism) on its own would increase blood sugar; however, what you're missing is that the GLP1 agonism (via insulin) is generally going to have a stronger impact in lowering blood sugar and will be the dominant effect for most people. If someone were to switch from another GLP1 (e.g. tirzepatide) to retatrutide it's conceivable that blood sugar might increase slightly from the glucagon effect, but it would be unexpected for a person not currently taking a GLP1 to see blood sugar go up with retatrutide. Of course, in metabolically deranged bodies, strange things can happen.

The way I think about retatrutide is that at low doses it's just another GLP1 and the glucagon agonism is likely negligible. At moderate to high doses the glucagon agonism starts to accomplish something. The clearest indication to me on that is if you dig into the phase 1 trial data, it comes with a data supplement that graphs various hormones following a single dose (of varying sizes) being administered. At the lowest doses, there's little difference in glucagon levels VS placebo, but at higher doses glucagon level is significantly suppressed. Your immediate response to this should be to question why it's suppressed rather than elevated. The reason why is because that graph is only showing you real glucagon in the bloodstream, which is going to differ from the effective glucagon level (real glucagon + glucagon agonist activity). When real glucagon level starts to go down (vs placebo) that shows your body feels that the effective glucagon level is too high and it's trying to scale back glucagon production in response. Meanwhile, the glucagon agonist is maintaining a higher effective glucagon level, overriding your body's control mechanism there.

It really is an elegant solution in that the right mix of glucagon agonism should offset some of the plateauing effect seen in GLP1 agonism. It would be interesting (although perhaps dangerous) if someone developed a straight glucagon agonist that one could dose alongside a GLP1 agonist to play around with and see how different ratios impacted them.

If I were in your shoes I might tread slowly and wait a month to months before implementing new things beyond what you're currently doing to help ensure you knew what was doing what in your body and were able to reach a new equilibrium between interventions.

Also, I might rethink straight carnivore (unless you have a specific health issue that you've resolved with it). On paper it makes a lot of sense and has a tight logical framework, but if you happen to be one of the people who finds you're not losing weight on it or your blood sugar control is poor, that would seem to suggest trying another approach. I suspect that some form of protein restriction might actually be advisable, as insane as I know that sounds.
 
You're right that the increase in glucagon (really glucagon agonism) on its own would increase blood sugar; however, what you're missing is that the GLP1 agonism (via insulin) is generally going to have a stronger impact in lowering blood sugar and will be the dominant effect for most people. If someone were to switch from another GLP1 (e.g. tirzepatide) to retatrutide it's conceivable that blood sugar might increase slightly from the glucagon effect, but it would be unexpected for a person not currently taking a GLP1 to see blood sugar go up with retatrutide. Of course, in metabolically deranged bodies, strange things can happen.

The way I think about retatrutide is that at low doses it's just another GLP1 and the glucagon agonism is likely negligible. At moderate to high doses the glucagon agonism starts to accomplish something. The clearest indication to me on that is if you dig into the phase 1 trial data, it comes with a data supplement that graphs various hormones following a single dose (of varying sizes) being administered. At the lowest doses, there's little difference in glucagon levels VS placebo, but at higher doses glucagon level is significantly suppressed. Your immediate response to this should be to question why it's suppressed rather than elevated. The reason why is because that graph is only showing you real glucagon in the bloodstream, which is going to differ from the effective glucagon level (real glucagon + glucagon agonist activity). When real glucagon level starts to go down (vs placebo) that shows your body feels that the effective glucagon level is too high and it's trying to scale back glucagon production in response. Meanwhile, the glucagon agonist is maintaining a higher effective glucagon level, overriding your body's control mechanism there.

It really is an elegant solution in that the right mix of glucagon agonism should offset some of the plateauing effect seen in GLP1 agonism. It would be interesting (although perhaps dangerous) if someone developed a straight glucagon agonist that one could dose alongside a GLP1 agonist to play around with and see how different ratios impacted them.

If I were in your shoes I might tread slowly and wait a month to months before implementing new things beyond what you're currently doing to help ensure you knew what was doing what in your body and were able to reach a new equilibrium between interventions.

Also, I might rethink straight carnivore (unless you have a specific health issue that you've resolved with it). On paper it makes a lot of sense and has a tight logical framework, but if you happen to be one of the people who finds you're not losing weight on it or your blood sugar control is poor, that would seem to suggest trying another approach. I suspect that some form of protein restriction might actually be advisable, as insane as I know that sounds.
True and I’m definitely coming from a background of metabolic derangement, though like mentioned im working on it. My blood sugar was well controlled on carnivore prior to taking Reta. Though no weight loss. I have had weight loss and I know the glucagon can take a little to kick in. I wasn’t sure whether I was a high responder. Since I was having decent appetite suppression as well. I’ve been splitting the .75mg dose Sunday and Thursday started at .5 though I think I’ll stick here as I did notice very slight side effects that were undesirable. Plus two pounds down is reasonable. I have played around a little with diet ate a bit of carbs one day and didn’t really notice a difference in length of elevated glucose. The one thing I was thinking is the slow motility spreads the insulin/glucose activity and that might be what I’m seeing. Without the peps I was working on insulin resistance and meal timing to reduce time of active insulin. So for me, that could be why it’s higher longer. I mean like I notice it’s about 5/6 hours and I get that little stomach empty iron that tastes ever so slightly like the beef patties I ate. But I’m going to stick with it and let the numbers tell the weekly story.
 
Reminds me of the rice diet from way back:

Yes, that style of approach is specifically what I was referring to. Not necessarily rice per se (since that implementation of a rice diet typically includes calorie reduction as well, which is pretty miserable on such a diet), but more of a mixed vegetable and starch diet, being selective in your starches to keep protein low. And yes, I know that's going to sound like a jumble of contradictions and insanity to those who haven't done the macro math on such diets before. This diet has found a recent resurgence online under the moniker HCLPLF (high carb low protein low fat).

I tried something resembling that theme for 2 months and was surprised by the results (in both good and bad ways). But if one wanted to read more about it, something like this would probably be a better starting point:

 
True and I’m definitely coming from a background of metabolic derangement, though like mentioned im working on it. My blood sugar was well controlled on carnivore prior to taking Reta. Though no weight loss. I have had weight loss and I know the glucagon can take a little to kick in. I wasn’t sure whether I was a high responder. Since I was having decent appetite suppression as well. I’ve been splitting the .75mg dose Sunday and Thursday started at .5 though I think I’ll stick here as I did notice very slight side effects that were undesirable. Plus two pounds down is reasonable. I have played around a little with diet ate a bit of carbs one day and didn’t really notice a difference in length of elevated glucose. The one thing I was thinking is the slow motility spreads the insulin/glucose activity and that might be what I’m seeing. Without the peps I was working on insulin resistance and meal timing to reduce time of active insulin. So for me, that could be why it’s higher longer. I mean like I notice it’s about 5/6 hours and I get that little stomach empty iron that tastes ever so slightly like the beef patties I ate. But I’m going to stick with it and let the numbers tell the weekly story.
And that's ultimately where I think the problems lies for some with carnivore. While you're on it blood sugar is often well controlled (although in some people fasted morning blood sugar levels will consistently land in the pre-diabetic range, depending on protein intake). Still, at worst you'd have A1cs in the high-5s to low-6s, which beats the heck out of typical diabetic numbers.

But the only way you're going to win longer term is to bring your weight down. That's (in my opinion) because weight is highly correlated to fasting insulin levels. You'd think zerocarb (another name for strict carnivore) would be the ultimate diet for that, but what a lot of people miss is that carbohydrate isn't the only thing that spikes insulin levels. Protein actually spikes insulin too (although gram for gram, only about half as much as carbohydrate). Many are unaware of the protein-insulin connection (google "insulin index" if you're in doubt) because it doesn't immediately impact blood sugar levels, since your pancreas is clever and releases a matching amount of glucagon to avoid blood sugar deviating significantly from a protein meal.

One technique I read about from a carnivore was to fast one or two days a week, which seemed to be enough to balance things out where fasting blood sugar came back down to normal levels. Others will make an effort to eat more fat (to get full on that rather than protein), but that never really worked for me and my hunger and satiety seemed more related to how much protein I would eat.

Of course, since you're now here, GLP1 is probably the past of least resistance to get your body weight down, and as that drops over time you'll also see your fasted insulin (and fasted blood sugar levels) come down further. Again, in the short-term GLP1s will probably slightly increase fasted insulin levels, but longer term the weight loss effect will win out against that effect.
 

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