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Theres also no reason to think Reta will stop working, as the body doesnt seem to deal with as much receptor desensitization.

Something I commonly see with GLPs is the idea that you need to be on them forever.

I know people have results they never dreamed of on them - but thats not right. your body not being able to lose weight is either caused by you eating like an asshole and having no self control(which is fixable) OR its because something is wrong with your body and theres a 90% chance there is medication that can fix your body so you dont need the GLP forever.

hormonal issues or metabolic ones have adverse effects on your body besides making weight loss difficult, its better to figure out some of those issues with a doctor so you dont have long term complications OR get tied to being on a GLP forever.
Ahem.. problems with women's hormones later in life are not easily resolved. Yes there's HRT but very few docs want to deal with it, it changes throughout the day, week etc. so not easily determined there are many kinds to track and the whole body is in a changing situation with many complexities. Your exprssed viewpoint is blind and dismissive, not to mention insulting.
 
Please point to what you've been reading that says this. Every expert I've spoken too all agree that this is just uneducated speculation by people that don't know what they are talking about.
I spent way too much time trying to find the article I read last night about the potential effects of going backwards from a triple agonist to a dual or single — and I still can't find it, but I know I read it. Along the way, I ran into a few AI-generated summaries, but I don’t really consider those solid sources. That said, I did end up reading quite a few other articles and studies during the search.

The article that I read last night didn’t claim this happens to everyone, but it did say that switching from a high dose of something like Reta to a dual or single could possibly affect how much stimulation a person receives. It was framed more as a potential effect than a guaranteed outcome. I also talked to someone who went through this kind of transition himself, and his experience lined up with what the article suggested — so to me, that reinforces the idea that it’s at least possible.

If I’m remembering right, I also saw something about Phase 2 trial results where subjects were monitored to see if they'd plateau at high doses, and after 48 weeks, they did not. That's reassuring. Since Reta is now in its final trial phase, I’m really curious to see what kind of data comes out from the trial as it started back in 2023.
 
What would be the purpose of switching off of reta though? Reaching a plateau on reta, you're not going to lose more on tirz because you've already lost more than tirz is capable of giving you.
 

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