So what you're saying is you can't link anything?There aren't papers on their opinions. Go to the roundtable and you can read them for yourself.
And anecdotal opinions aren't worth much. In god we trust, all other must provide data.
So what you're saying is you can't link anything?There aren't papers on their opinions. Go to the roundtable and you can read them for yourself.
Nope can't link it because it's long in depth conversations. I could link all the actual studies done on reta but you already know that they all use weekly dosing and I doubt it matters to you because you think you know why even though it's complete speculation.So what you're saying is you can't link anything?
And anecdotal opinions aren't worth much. In god we trust, all other must provide data.
I'm not the one making strong claims about the efficacy of weekly dosing vs. more frequent.Nope can't link it because it's long in depth conversations. I could link all the actual studies done on reta but you already know that they all use weekly dosing and I doubt it matters to you because you think you know why even though it's complete speculation.
How about you put up something to prove your theory about split dosing since it goes against the actual studies?
The studies looked at once per week dosing. To my knowledge, and there are certainly many studies I didn't read on reta, reta has only been studied with once per week dosing. Deciding to only take it once per week since that's how it's been studied sounds like a reasonable decision, although I'll confess I take tirzepatide twice per week even though it too has only tested in trials once per week. As to your suggestion that you won't go into ketosis unless you take reta only once per week, I'm unaware of scientific basis for such a statement. If the drug makers thought taking reta once per week resulted in ketosis, they likely would have tried more frequent dosing to avoid causing diabetics to suffer from ketoacidosis.But twice a week is still way less than the people that are doing it everyday. Drug responses are not linear to the serum level. If the serum levels don't spike enough the ketogenic effects are lot likely to happen.
I can't go to the round table. King Arthur wants to kill me because I slept with Guinevere.There aren't papers on their opinions. Go to the roundtable and you can read them for yourself.
How does that even happen?I believe it. What I don't understand is no appetite suppression with reta... But more loss
You are making a claim that twice a week is as effective. Extrapolating is no less speculation. Statins are a very different class of drugs that work in a different way.I'm not the one making strong claims about the efficacy of weekly dosing vs. more frequent.
It's a minor ketosis anyways. It's just an example of one thing that could explain why proper spacing between doses works better.The studies looked at once per week dosing. To my knowledge, and there are certainly many studies I didn't read on reta, reta has only been studied with once per week dosing. Deciding to only take it once per week since that's how it's been studied sounds like a reasonable decision, although I'll confess I take tirzepatide twice per week even though it too has only tested in trials once per week. As to your suggestion that you won't go into ketosis unless you take reta only once per week, I'm unaware of scientific basis for such a statement. If the drug makers thought taking reta once per week resulted in ketosis, they likely would have tried more frequent dosing to avoid causing diabetics to suffer from ketoacidosis.
I am making a claim that we have no specific reason to believe that twice a week is less effective than once a week. For someone who is passing judgment on people's adherence to scientific principles, you should probably remember that the null hypothesis is a foundational part to science.You are making a claim that twice a week is as effective. Extrapolating is no less speculation. Statins are a very different class of drugs that work in a different way.
You're pretending that you're being more scientific than just following the studies and the subject experts that have weighed in on them (that you haven't bothered to go read).
I'm not making an argument. And I'm definitely not wasting any more time on you.But instead your argument is that it might maybe be important for causing "minor ketosis," despite having provided no evidence that the effects on ketosis differ from one dosing schedule to another.
You made a strong statement about how the way a good portion of the users of retatrutide are doing it wrong without providing any evidence. I'm not sure how you think that's not making an argument.I'm not making an argument. And I'm definitely not wasting any more time on you.
Keep doing what ever you want. I was never trying to stop you.