SSA has Orforglipron for sale

lessthanhalf

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I just had a look at the latest SSA price list, and they have Orforglipron for sale. Maybe other people knew it was already around, but it is the first time I have seen it for sale. It is not a lot of use to me personally as maximum effectiveness is more important to me than convenience ( trying to keep off 72kg long term hopefully ). But for a lot of the population who are not keen on injecting themselves, it is great news. From my quick reading of the studies it sounds about as effective for weight loss as semaglutide, max 14.7% , with less nausea and vomiting , but possibly more diarrhoea, but overall it sounds like less gi side effects. A bit expensive at $185 usd for 100 12mg pills, doses in the studies were 6 to 45mg. I am not sure this forum is its target market but it is not hard to imagine it being very popular.
 
Its just that some manufacturers use more filler than actual drug, same with most of the supplements you get out of amazon. Or you think everything from amazon is 100%.
Nearly every manufacturer uses more filler than actual drug. That's how tablets work, even with pharma.
 
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I noticed SSA also has 20mg. Cagri. I've never seen it in such a large size but with big pharma studying it now as a combination with GLP's, it may start getting more popular and cheaper. I imagine that I will eventually be on a bigger dose when I get to maintenance and where 20mg. kits make financial sense.
 
I just had a look at the latest SSA price list, and they have Orforglipron for sale. Maybe other people knew it was already around, but it is the first time I have seen it for sale. It is not a lot of use to me personally as maximum effectiveness is more important to me than convenience ( trying to keep off 72kg long term hopefully ). But for a lot of the population who are not keen on injecting themselves, it is great news. From my quick reading of the studies it sounds about as effective for weight loss as semaglutide, max 14.7% , with less nausea and vomiting , but possibly more diarrhoea, but overall it sounds like less gi side effects. A bit expensive at $185 usd for 100 12mg pills, doses in the studies were 6 to 45mg. I am not sure this forum is its target market but it is not hard to imagine it being very popular.
This one's coming down the pike and will likely be available in the gray market long before it's commercially available (like Reta is). It's an oral formulation and a quad-receptor agonist. Next up, quintuple-receptor agonist. Stay tuned...

https://firstwordpharma.com/story/5...tigational, oral,many of which are injectable
 
This one's coming down the pike and will likely be available in the gray market long before it's commercially available (like Reta is). It's an oral formulation and a quad-receptor agonist. Next up, quintuple-receptor agonist. Stay tuned...

https://firstwordpharma.com/story/5991011#:~:text=NA-931 (Bioglutide™)—an investigational, oral,many of which are injectable
I'm all in on an oral quad receptor. Even an oral dual or triple agonist. While I don't mind pinning myself weekly, I'm not addicted to pinning myself with a million different questionable peps and I'd love to just stop injecting myself period.
 
If anyone is planning on trying it, can they check back in here with how it goes?
I now have an embarrassing amount of Tirz. (I might have a problem) Other than stacking with Survo, I don't plan on changing much. I love the concept of it tho. My fear is that it would be harder on the stomach. I'm not sure if that would be the case.
 
Its just that some manufacturers use more filler than actual drug, same with most of the supplements you get out of amazon. Or you think everything from amazon is 100%.
'Filler' is a consumer term with some baggage, implying non-essential bulking agents added for profit.

I'm both a GLP enthusiast/consumer and a manufacturer of pills (my profession). The term for 'filler' is excipients. They are never present to provide bulk or trick consumers. Excipients always perform functions: binders (usually cellulose derivatives), disintegrants (croscarmellose sodium, crospovidone), flow agents (glidants like silicon dioxide or talc), lubricants (stearic acid or Mag stearate), coatings, and stabilizers.

They all serve a purpose. Active ingredients do not easily or willingly tablet or capsule themselves. I promise you that we don't put these things into pills to fool or trick anyone. We use as little of each as we must.

Having said all that, supplements on Amazon is a different can of worms. You're right about that. It's a Wild West of Chinese brands pretending to be American, anonymous American 'brands' whose owners are also selling yoga mats and life coaching, and some legitimate brands who care about quality and health. Third-party testing by NOW Foods shows that many of them are just plain, as you call it, fillers or rice powder. https://www.nowfoods.com/healthy-li...-quality-issues-supplement-brands-sold-amazon

If you're shopping for a supplement, call the company. See if anyone picks up. Ask for a CoA, just like you would SRY or SSA.
 
Triple plus Sema wonder how it would compare to Reta plus Sema?
At some point, combinations must be complementary rather than competitive/antagonistic. Otherwise, you could just stack Sema, Tirz, Reta, Bioglutide, Survo for an 11X receptor agonist. The primary downside to this approach is that you could end up weighing zero (RIP). 😴
 
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