Sarsippius
GLP-1 Apprentice

Yeah, I just picked up a T30 kit. I'm not sure what to do with it yet. Do I add Tirz to the stack, or replace Tirz for Cargri or Reta, or just go to straight Tirz? I should probably start a thread about it.


Sarsippius said:Yeah, I just picked up a T30 kit. I'm not sure what to do with it yet. Do I add Tirz to the stack, or replace Tirz for Cargri or Reta, or just go to straight Tirz? I should probably start a thread about it.

When this happens, after you have lost 125 lbs, it is a good example of where it looks like the medication is no longer working as well, or tolerance has developed.Sarsippius said:You're going to have about a year before you buildup a tolerance and your appetite returns. Plan accordingly.

lessthanhalf said:You are already at max doses of reta and cagri, so there is no totally obvious way to get more weight loss...

Unless long term studies of reta show negative effects from glucagon agonism, then it is pretty unlikely. There is a lot of research on tirz , so new unexpected adverse effects are not very likely. And there was the 7.2mg and 16 mg studies on semaglutide, which unsurprisingly showed pretty high rates of nausea and vomiting, and not as much extra weight loss as they might have liked, but it did not show any new unexpected adverse effects, just higher rates of the usual well known ones. So for GLP-1 agonism , there is really very good evidence of no long term problems, even at doses that make me want to puke looking at them. Pretty good for GIP with tirz , and much earlier stage research for reta and cagri.woundcarping said:The obvious choice for me was to increase the dose.
You're bang on about being well into the area diminishing returns. If the data isn't problematic (sides, blood work, RHR, HRV, sleep quality, etc), it's hard for me to argue against increasing the dose... especially split dosing to keep the peaks more subdued with the same area under the curve.
My take was to increase the dose sooner rather than later, under the premise that time isn't particularly on my side. It's not a race, but it's certainly not a lazy river.
On the high side outcome my equilibrium point is below my target weight, I titrated down to match my equilibrium point with my goal with no ill effects, and live my life as a high responder to Reta.
On the low side I'm irreparably damaging my receptors and my maintenance dose will have to be higher than it otherwise could have been, maybe.
On the abysmal side, elevated doses are later shown to radically shorten quality or duration of life and I've boned myself. Seems unlikely.

lessthanhalf said:Unless long term studies of reta show negative effects from glucagon agonism, then it is pretty unlikely. There is a lot of research on tirz , so new unexpected adverse effects are not very likely. And there was the 7.2mg and 16 mg studies on semaglutide, which unsurprisingly showed pretty high rates of nausea and vomiting, and not as much extra weight loss as they might have liked, but it did not show any new unexpected adverse effects, just higher rates of the usual well known ones. So for GLP-1 agonism , there is really very good evidence of no long term problems, even at doses that make me want to puke looking at them. Pretty good for GIP with tirz , and much earlier stage research for reta and cagri.
The only bit of research I have seen so far to suggest it might be possible to damage your receptors is the one there is a post about currently about stopping and restarting in mice causing problems, and less weight loss. There really are no other indications of long term problems, and weight loss was maintained for 5 years on a consistent dose with no trending up of weight over time at all, and if there was long term tolerance to the weight loss effects that graph would show increases in weight eventually.

I found my weight loss started to slow with tirz around the 1 year mark and then by 18 months I was losing at all, I was maintaining. I came off it completely for 3 months to get it fully out of my system then started a low dose of reta 3 months ago, I added in cagrilintide a month ago just to help with the food noise aspect a bit more (it's not as strong on ret as it is on tirz) and the weight is dropping again at around 2lb a week which is what I averaged on tirzDidntMakeBrownies said:So I have been doing 6 of tirz for 5 months now, down 35 lbs and would like to take off another 45 to get to goal-ish. I thought slow and steady was good because I lose at a consistent rate even if not a TON and I have almost no side effects. But then I saw somewhere that tirz weight loss tapers off after 72 weeks or so. If I’ve already eaten up a third of that window should I dose up to try to accelerate the weight loss? Add Reta if I can ever figure out how to order from China? I would hate to stall out…

I think you've actually been approaching this in a more sustainable way than the " just keep titrating it up" crowd. One thing that helped me reframe this: that the 72 week number people quote (from trials like Surmount 1 trial) doesn’t mean the medication suddenly stops working. It just shows that weight loss naturally slows and plateaus over time, mostly because the body adapts, not because you’ve “used it up.”DidntMakeBrownies said:So I have been doing 6 of tirz for 5 months now, down 35 lbs and would like to take off another 45 to get to goal-ish. I thought slow and steady was good because I lose at a consistent rate even if not a TON and I have almost no side effects. But then I saw somewhere that tirz weight loss tapers off after 72 weeks or so. If I’ve already eaten up a third of that window should I dose up to try to accelerate the weight loss? Add Reta if I can ever figure out how to order from China? I would hate to stall out…

This was me a while ago, I felt the tirz wasn’t working anymore so I added a little Reta, and as I increased the Reta I decreased the tirz. I am below goal now, Reta helped me get there.DidntMakeBrownies said:So I have been doing 6 of tirz for 5 months now, down 35 lbs and would like to take off another 45 to get to goal-ish. I thought slow and steady was good because I lose at a consistent rate even if not a TON and I have almost no side effects. But then I saw somewhere that tirz weight loss tapers off after 72 weeks or so. If I’ve already eaten up a third of that window should I dose up to try to accelerate the weight loss? Add Reta if I can ever figure out how to order from China? I would hate to stall out…
lessthanhalf said:The 72 weeks is just the longest follow up that has been done so far, and shows that the weight loss is maintained for that time if the person stays on the drug at the dose they used to lose the weight.


lessthanhalf said:You are right , I must have been thinking months not weeks as I knew it was 4 or 5 years. And 193 weeks is just under 4 years.
It is a pity the high dose tirz study is not available yet. The difference in weight loss from 10mg to 15 is fairly small for tirz on that graph, which does suggest it is close to the diminishing returns dose.
Reta might be better, but despite seeing quite a few people on this forum on doses of tirz greater than 15mg , I have seen hardly anyone on more than 12mg of reta.
This paper attempted to make mathematical models of predicted weight loss at different doses.
"Comparative efficacy and safety of GLP-1 receptor agonists for weight
reduction: A model-based meta-analysis of placebo-controlled trials"
And it suggests there might be further weight loss from higher doses of reta, though it was written before the most recent reta results, though my maths is too rusty to be that useful in interpreting it properly. I got chatgpt to estimate possible max weight loss from reta at higher doses from the formulas in the paper and it was high 30% range at 20mg of reta or so.
Can I ask how you introduced Reta? Did your heart rate jack up? What dose did you do?Wecandothis said:This was me a while ago, I felt the tirz wasn’t working anymore so I added a little Reta, and as I increased the Reta I decreased the tirz. I am below goal now, Reta helped me get there.

Yes it skipped beats, at the beginning, and my resting heart rate was higher, when exercising and at rest, I started with .5 and added the other .5 four days later, I stayed on tirz, and as I moved up in Reta, I decreased in tirz. Current about 2 tirz with 6-8 Reta. I still need the tirz for anti inflammatory effects.DidntMakeBrownies said:Can I ask how you introduced Reta? Did your heart rate jack up? What dose did you do?

Don’t go by this, I am much older then you and I am two pounds under my goal, which is skinnier then I have ever been in my life. Just eat right and exercise and the weight will come off.Grogu said:Thanks for the study! I'll definitely take a look. The big takeaway for me (so far with a quick glance) is the age analysis. Gives me an excuse why I might have not reach my own weight loss targets being in my mid-50s. A lot of times in online forums and other venues when people don't reach goal a portion of that could be age and the things related to aging that might affect the effectiveness of these medications. Thanks again!
I had a cardiac ablation for a heart arythmia so I am kind of afraid of this.Wecandothis said:Yes it skipped beats, at the beginning, and my resting heart rate was higher, when exercising and at rest, I started with .5 and added the other .5 four days later, I stayed on tirz, and as I moved up in Reta, I decreased in tirz. Current about 2 tirz with 6-8 Reta. I still need the tirz for anti inflammatory effects.
DidntMakeBrownies said:I had a cardiac ablation for a heart arythmia so I am kind of afraid of this.

I have known pvcs. My hubbie had an ablation years ago and and he uses Reta successfully. But maybe your doctor should give you advice on this. My cardiologist knows I take it.DidntMakeBrownies said:I had a cardiac ablation for a heart arythmia so I am kind of afraid of this.