Tirzepatide at higher dose?

I saw some statistics on aGLP-1 overdose cases in U.S. emergency departments. About 18,000 people last year, if I remember well. Many of them took the entire pen instead of multi-dosing. Mostly issues with gastrointestinal blockages, gallbladder problems, etc. Some suffered long-term effects (you either die from it or go crazy: I know because I’ve been through it.../j)

There are two main reasons to increase the dose: it isn't working, or it isn't working fast enough.

The first case has an obvious solution: do something else. Personally, Tirz wasn't working very well, so I added Retatrutide. It turns out they complement each other.

The second case is impatience. That comes down to avidity. Always feeling empty. What a coincidence!
If you're eating a lot, it's worth taking a closer look at the wound that's making you feel empty.
There is a trick: the gratitude journal. Write a few lines every evening about what you notice you've received during the day. It works in 2-3 weeks. and it's much cheaper than a session with a therapist. And there's no need to beat yourself up over what you didn't do right.
(That'll be $100, but you can pay what you can /j)
 
Assuming the reason is a true stall, occurring more than a year after starting, or low rates of weight loss with a degree of hunger that is difficult to be comfortable with, it is reasonable.

I think it depends a bit on how severe the obesity is in the first place, but most of the time it has to be a pretty major problem if 15mg of tirz was not enough. But in general the obesity needs to have been severe enough to justify unknown extra risks from high dose/combo strategies.

The only higher dose studies so far were for semaglutide at 7.2mg and 16mg, both caused some extra weight loss, but not huge amounts, and had a lot more side effects. But importantly there were no new severe unexpected adverse effects from the higher doses, while this does not prove higher dose tirz is safe it is at least a bit reassuring.

Going from 15mg up to 20mg probably depends on what happened when you increased from 10 to 15mg, if you found those increases helpful, and did not cause major issues with side effects , then increasing the dose might be reasonable.

Otherwise adding in elora or cagri makes sense, but at low doses with slow increases like 0.25 of cagri or 1mg of elora. Cagri is cheaper , elora is super new and less is known but is probably more effective with less side effects , especially at low doses of 3mg or less, but at higher doses above 6mg does also have high rates of nausea and fatigue up to about 50/50%, but a bit better than high dose cagri.
 
All right fellow labrats...what are the pros and cons of 20 or even 25 MG weekly tirzepatide?
It's like this: I don't eat alot more than I should. Just a bit. I've gotten used to pretty much a constant nausea feeling. See the picture on the left? That's real. I'm that thick headed. The opposite of a bodybuilder. I need extra fat. It's padding. It's for immunity. I'm more flexible and agile now. That's good. As I get older, it's good to not carry too much extra weight, but I need to be able to take tumbles. Like I've said before, I don't need to lift weights because of my life. It's coming up on bailing season.
 
All right fellow labrats...what are the pros and cons of 20 or even 25 MG weekly tirzepatide? Any studys on this?🤔🤔🤔🤔

I’m on 20mg of tirzepatide. As others have mentioned, EL is testing higher doses of tirzepatide, although the exact doses haven’t been disclosed and I honestly don’t think it’s 20mg and 25mg. But we shall see at some point.

The only cons that I can think of are 1) everyone on glp-1 forum thinking you’re a freak of nature, and 2) the horns growing out of my temples making putting on a t-shirt more difficult.

Pros, I’m still losing weight at 18 monhts.
 

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