I'm a 60 yr. old, post menopausal female who has lost 60 lbs. on MJ in 8 months. If you can handle the side effects, this medication is a miracle. Absolute game changer.
I’m in the Triumph study. Tomorrow is week 7 on Retatrutide. I’m a non diabetic, 47 yo morbidly obese patient. I’ve never taken a medication for weight loss. This is a dream come true. I’ve never experienced loss of appetite. I can’t explain the ease of losing weight. I work out, eat less carbs and increased my protein. Virtually no side effects. I got bumped to 4mg after starting the first four week on 2 mg. At week nine I get bumped up to either 6, 9 or 12 mg. It’s a double blind basket study. I’ll never know what I got.
15 weeks into taking Retatrutide and I'm already at 18% weight loss so far on 4mg. 252 down to 207. Only side effect for me is diarrhea about once every 4 shots, for about an hour. No T2D, and no comorbidities. 54M
Good vid, but I don’t know about Retatrutide showing up in ‘a year or two’. The relevant Phase 3 trials for Reta have completion dates ranging from late-2025 to mid-2026. Add on another 6 months for FDA approval (aka ‘fast track’ waiver), and we’d be talking mid-to-late 2026 for Reta to actually hit the market. Unless somehow they don’t need to submit completed Phase 3 trial data to the FDA to get approval? But that would be a bit strange, and less rigorous regarding the FDA really kicking the tires on these drugs before approving them. 🤷♂️
This being the first triple hormone receptor agonist, I have been intrigued since Lilly Pharma's research began. I am especially curious to see results from the ongoing Triumph 1 clinical trial. Preliminary data certainly looks promising, but we are still years away from a retail version hitting the market.
What is the effect of this drug on blood sugar levels? Is it just a diet drug to replace ozembic or does it have more serious medicinal purpose like controlling diabetes and what kind of price point does it have, is it one of those thousand dollars a month luxury prescription that no insurance will cover or is it actually for normal people with tighter budgets and less insurance coverage?
There are select few situations in which insurance companies cover semaglutide and tirzapetide. The likelihood that they will cover the newest most expensive one, is unlikely
"is it just a diet drug to replace Ozempic" Semaglutide has powerful systemic benefits beyond just dropping weight. Pick up a newspaper (so to speak). It has a drastic effect on deaths relating to heart problems. It reverses fatty damage to the liver. It reverses damage to the kidneys. It heals damage to the joints. It's being studied as a preventative for Alzheimer's. Because of all these benefits, it's very likely that these drugs will soon be covered by insurance for many people. You might have to wait three years, if you're not willing to go through alternative sources.
Phase 2 showed that for those that experienced any arrhythmia, it went away after an adjustment to that particular dose. None lasted to the end of the trial.
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I'm a 60 yr. old, post menopausal female who has lost 60 lbs. on MJ in 8 months. If you can handle the side effects, this medication is a miracle. Absolute game changer.
What were the side effects
but MJ is not retatrutide right?
that's great to hear- I'm hoping it can keep the weight off as I get older.
I like that you mentioned lifestyle factors to change as well while taking Ozempic
Great video!
Glad you enjoyed it
I love the simplicity of your videos 👍
I’m in the Triumph study. Tomorrow is week 7 on Retatrutide. I’m a non diabetic, 47 yo morbidly obese patient. I’ve never taken a medication for weight loss. This is a dream come true. I’ve never experienced loss of appetite. I can’t explain the ease of losing weight. I work out, eat less carbs and increased my protein. Virtually no side effects. I got bumped to 4mg after starting the first four week on 2 mg. At week nine I get bumped up to either 6, 9 or 12 mg. It’s a double blind basket study. I’ll never know what I got.
Good luck hope all the best for u
I'm glad it's working so well for you! This class of drugs is truly revolutionary to medicine.
Are you sure you’re not on the placebo then if you don’t have appetite loss?
If you've lost your appetite pretty sure you got the real thing.
Nice breakdown!
im on mounjaro now..looks good
Thank you for making this video great information 👍👍👍💕
15 weeks into taking Retatrutide and I'm already at 18% weight loss so far on 4mg. 252 down to 207. Only side effect for me is diarrhea about once every 4 shots, for about an hour. No T2D, and no comorbidities. 54M
Thank you for sharing this!!!
Good vid, but I don’t know about Retatrutide showing up in ‘a year or two’.
The relevant Phase 3 trials for Reta have completion dates ranging from late-2025 to mid-2026. Add on another 6 months for FDA approval (aka ‘fast track’ waiver), and we’d be talking mid-to-late 2026 for Reta to actually hit the market.
Unless somehow they don’t need to submit completed Phase 3 trial data to the FDA to get approval? But that would be a bit strange, and less rigorous regarding the FDA really kicking the tires on these drugs before approving them. 🤷♂️
This being the first triple hormone receptor agonist, I have been intrigued since Lilly Pharma's research began. I am especially curious to see results from the ongoing Triumph 1 clinical trial. Preliminary data certainly looks promising, but we are still years away from a retail version hitting the market.
You can get it already I've lost 5kg in 2 weeks 1mg a week so far
@@olley1ify where is it available please
@@alisonbates4186 biolab .. called triple g
This peptide is available from umbrella labs already
What is the effect of this drug on blood sugar levels? Is it just a diet drug to replace ozembic or does it have more serious medicinal purpose like controlling diabetes and what kind of price point does it have, is it one of those thousand dollars a month luxury prescription that no insurance will cover or is it actually for normal people with tighter budgets and less insurance coverage?
There are select few situations in which insurance companies cover semaglutide and tirzapetide. The likelihood that they will cover the newest most expensive one, is unlikely
"is it just a diet drug to replace Ozempic"
Semaglutide has powerful systemic benefits beyond just dropping weight. Pick up a newspaper (so to speak).
It has a drastic effect on deaths relating to heart problems. It reverses fatty damage to the liver. It reverses damage to the kidneys. It heals damage to the joints. It's being studied as a preventative for Alzheimer's.
Because of all these benefits, it's very likely that these drugs will soon be covered by insurance for many people. You might have to wait three years, if you're not willing to go through alternative sources.
@@troy3423I would think it will be marketed for diabetes initially
I've been on this 4 weeks now and not felt a thing and my hunger is back
What about the increased arrhythmia rate with retatrutide?
Phase 2 showed that for those that experienced any arrhythmia, it went away after an adjustment to that particular dose. None lasted to the end of the trial.
These side effects were quite transient if you look on retatrutide sub, quite a few from the Triumph study are posting who have experienced it mildly
Reta will compete against Tirz and maybe kill Sema.
Good info but sleepy and boring... Gotta step the energy up man
He's a doctor, not Jerry Springer
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Thanks doc great info
You bet!