Stopping GLP-1 Drugs Triggers Weight Regain 4x Faster Than Ending Exercise

trojanpeptide

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I wonder if it depends on how long you are on it. At this point I've been on glp1s for almost 3 years. I've gone at least 4 weeks without any glp1s and my eating and weight stays the same. However, I think if I would have stopped after 6 months I probably would have gained everythng back and then some.
 
"Weight regain faster after stopping weight loss drugs than after dietary weight loss programmes."

I don't find this at all surprising or an indictment of the effectiveness of glps.
Weight loss through diet and exercise involves forming new habits and massive lifestyle changes. It would only make sense that slacking off on exercise or a diet plan will result in a more gradual reversion, while stopping glps without having made any other lifestyle changes will be a lot more abrupt.

Maybe I'm misunderstanding something though. The article didn't get into the weeds with the participant data.

I'm curious to see the results from people who combine glps with diet and exercise, and maintain the latter two after stopping the peptides.
 
This is just physics. Exercise really only burns so many calories; it is woefully deficient when it comes to weight loss when compared to calorie deficits, which is what GLPs are good at creating. Nothing new here, just silly headlines to make people scared.
 
When you come off any diet. You’re looking at the same stats. Weight watchers, keto, carnivore, paleo. Go back to your previous routines and you’ll go back to your previous weight.
 
When you come off any diet. You’re looking at the same stats. Weight watchers, keto, carnivore, paleo. Go back to your previous routines and you’ll go back to your previous weight.
I wonder what the true stats are on say for example WW for regain. My sister used WW many years ago and lost about a 150lbs in 2 years and then we had a death in our family and she gained 175lbs back in almost a year, like shockingly fast.

My sister is now on a glp1, has lost 220+ from her highest and is like 5lbs away from not being obese for the first time in her life. She will probably be on a glp1 forever, as I will too. Our whole family has dealt with obesity.
 
"Weight regain faster after stopping weight loss drugs than after dietary weight loss programmes."

I don't find this at all surprising or an indictment of the effectiveness of glps.
Weight loss through diet and exercise involves forming new habits and massive lifestyle changes. It would only make sense that slacking off on exercise or a diet plan will result in a more gradual reversion, while stopping glps without having made any other lifestyle changes will be a lot more abrupt.

Maybe I'm misunderstanding something though. The article didn't get into the weeds with the participant data.

I'm curious to see the results from people who combine glps with diet and exercise, and maintain the latter two after stopping the peptides.
I can't find the study, but I recall a study from maybe 20 years ago about who were the small percentage of individuals who kept the weight off. The conclusion, as I recall, is that the few who kept the weight off rearranged their whole lives around the concept of maintaining their weight. They were laser focused and nothing else mattered. Not work. Not family. Nothing. Dinner out with the family and blow the calorie budget -- nope. A family event that interfered with the workout -- nope. Take a job with time commitments that interfered with the weight loss lifestyle -- nope.

I don't think I could live like that if I wanted to. And I don't want to.
 
There's a saying that goes: You can't outrun a bad diet.
The idea is that you can't lose significant weight from exercise alone. You have to fix your diet!

Makes sense that the reverse would hold true and reverting to your old diet would lead to much faster weight gain than reverting to your sedentary behavior.
 
There's a saying that goes: You can't outrun a bad diet.
The idea is that you can't lose significant weight from exercise alone. You have to fix your diet!

Makes sense that the reverse would hold true and reverting to your old diet would lead to much faster weight gain than reverting to your sedentary behavior.
I haven't heard that one, but i have heard " You cant outrun your fork" lol
 
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