Venicequeenf
Established Member (Voting Rights)
I am trialling Mounjaro since around 6 or 7 weeks. BMI now 19.5. since beginning lost around 2-3 kg (the LDA weight gain). Will update in a few weeks.
I try it for ME. It is supposed to lower inflammation and is being studied for condition like ours. I experiment a lot, yes - my condition is dire and I need anything which could make me even 10% better. I am not sensitive to medication - never have side effects, but also rarely effects.Why are you taking it if your BMI is 19???
That weight loss is concerning for someone with a low BMI. I hope your doctor is keeping a close eye on your weight and giving you sensible advice.I am trialling Mounjaro since around 6 or 7 weeks. BMI now 19.5. since beginning lost around 2-3 kg (the LDA weight gain). Will update in a few weeks.
sometimes it is not about a cure. It is about relief for a subgroup of peopleI’ve been on tirzepatide for a few months. 30 lbs lost. Zero effect on ME/CFS symptoms, as expected. Millions of people are on these drugs. If they cured our condition, we’d know about it.
When their appetite is severely suppressed, people tend to eat whatever sounds tolerable rather than what's nutritionally optimal. This can lead to inadequate protein and micronutrient intake.
Malnutrition Is Common
A study examining over 460,000 patients who were prescribed GLP-1 agonists found that 22% developed nutritional deficiencies within 12 months of starting treatment. Vitamin D deficiency was the most common, affecting 13% of patients within one year. But the deficiencies went far beyond a single vitamin—vitamin A, vitamin C, B vitamins, calcium, and zinc levels were also reduced.
Physical symptoms of these nutritional deficiencies can include hair loss, fatigue, muscle weakness, and slow wound healing. As a psychiatrist, I recognize that these same deficiencies can also cause psychiatric symptoms like depression, anxiety, and cognitive impairment. All of these problems can originate from insufficient vitamins and minerals.
That's amazing, congrats! The % loss is exactly what you'd expect based on the average outcome in clinical trials of tirz.I have been on mounjaro for 16 months. Weight loss 21% of body weight.
Thank you @Sid.That's amazing, congrats! The % loss is exactly what you'd expect based on the average outcome in clinical trials of tirz.
The abstract says "This was an observational, retrospective analysis of de-identified patient-level claims data from 461,382 adults newly prescribed GLP-1RAs between 7/2017 and 12/2021 with no prior diagnoses of nutritional deficiencies." To me, this implies that they didn't have pre and post tests measuring levels of these nutrients. A doctor is much more likely to test you for deficiencies after major weight loss. Low vitamin D levels, for example, are very common in the general population.22% of 460,000 patients prescribed GLP-1 drugs developing nutritional deficiencies? That sounds unlikely to me. Unless maybe doctors are taking the risk of nutritional deficiencies when taking these drugs seriously and are testing and finding issues like Vitamin D deficiency that were there before the drug was started.
Are you tracking your calories by any chance? At the risk of stating the obvious, at the end of the day, one has to be in a calorie deficit to lose weight. For sedentary women with ME/CFS like us, maintenance calories can be surprisingly low, and those TDEE calculators online give an unrealistic picture of how much you need to be eating to lose weight under these circumstances. Also, as your body shrinks, it requires less calories to maintain. On top of that, there is also a metabolic adaptation (adaptive thermogenesis) that takes place as you lose weight (especially major weight loss like your 21% of starting weight) which is the body's attempt to regain the lost weight. Tirzepatide doesn't reverse this in humans (only rodents). So, all these factors conspire to stall our progress.Thank you @Sid.
I am pretty pleased especially because of having lipoedema. That hasn't moved at all and seems more obvious because of the loss of the adipose fat. One odd thing is that I actually reached this weight a couple of months ago then the loss stopped dead; there has been no more loss even though I have not changed the dosage of tirz. I'm not sure if something metabolic happened around then or if subconsciously, I stopped working on the diet part of the process and have been less rigorous in my eating.
I am always aware of my calorie intake, weigh daily and if I have a bad day calorie wise ( like yesterday- Mr B's birthday) know that I will have to lose the pound or two gain ( I had 2 roast potatoes, a little cheese sauce on cauliflower and one slice of cake that I wouldn't normally eat) quickly by very careful eating. It was relatively easy until I reached this around 21% loss. Now, this week, it will be extremely difficult.Are you tracking your calories by any chance? At the risk of stating the obvious, at the end of the day, one has to be in a calorie deficit to lose weight. For sedentary women with ME/CFS like us, maintenance calories can be surprisingly low, and those TDEE calculators online give an unrealistic picture of how much you need to be eating to lose weight under these circumstances. Also, as your body shrinks, it requires less calories to maintain. On top of that, there is also a metabolic adaptation (adaptive thermogenesis) that takes place as you lose weight (especially major weight loss like your 21% of starting weight) which is the body's attempt to regain the lost weight. Tirzepatide doesn't reverse this in humans (only rodents). So, all these factors conspire to stall our progress.