Starting from scratch after major weight loss best route to build muscle?

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TopLad

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38M. Haven’t trained in years. 6 foot 2 200 lbs exact

I was more overweight and recently dropped a significant amount of weight (close to goal now) using retatrutide. The issue is I didn’t have much muscle to begin with, so now I look kind of “skinny fat” with a pretty blank slate body composition.

I’m about to start lifting and actually build a routine from scratch. Diet is under control, planning to increase protein and calories gradually.

Where I’m stuck is which peptide route to go, i’ve reviewed posts here and elsewhere just not sure should I consider:

CJC + Ipamorelin

Tesamorelin

Or anything else people think actually makes sense at this stage

Goal is simple: add lean muscle and not screw up the progress I’ve made.

For someone basically starting from zero muscle-wise after weight loss, what would you do?
 
Athletic, middle-aged female here. I preferred Tesa. When I used Ipa (even with Reta), it drastically increased my hunger signalling due to it working through the ghrelin pathway. I had better strength gains with Tesa while losing stubborn belly fat, even when I wasn't training as hard. If I hit my protein goal of 100-120g/ protein daily (tiny woman) I would see both hypertrophy and strength gains regardless of training frequency and intensity. It was worth the extra money.

When I used IPA (because I was being a cheap bastard) , I started seeing the issues that come with GH analogues, carpal tunnel, other tendon injuries that wouldn't heal with BPC/TB, parasthesia of both arms/hands every single morning, and edema if I missed a day due to travel. I never saw any of those side effects on Tesa.

Why increase protein gradually? The potential of the runs from not being used to taking in the intake? 💩

If I were starting from 0, I would start slow, because those tendons will need time to catch up to the strength gains you'll see with your muscles. When you feel like you can increase the weight, don't, have the discipline to hold there for a few weeks, despite how easy it seems.
 
I'm going to say go straight hgh. Usually cheaper than tesa these days and we know it works. 2iu puts most people at the upper range.

Expect a few lbs of water retention which ever route you go.

And keep expectations realistic. None will grow any meaningful amount of muscle on its own. At most keeps muscles looking slightly fuller. The effects are subtle and discreet. Slightly improved recover, strengthening of connective tissue, etc. Lipolysis is pretty overrated. Yes has small impact but cheaper and more aggressive ways to obtain that.
 
TopLad said:
For someone basically starting from zero muscle-wise after weight loss, what would you do?

I'd do blood work to look at testosterone and IGF-1 levels at least, before deciding what needs to be added to resistance training.
 
woundcarping said:
I'd do blood work to look at testosterone and IGF-1 levels at least, before deciding what needs to be added to resistance training.
100% agreed. Start your lifting program first, get that going. Hard work is a key part of this regardless. At 38 unless you have a negative IGF-1 z-score I'd probably leave the GH options alone (Tesa was awful for me, I tried because I had a negative z-score at 44). Similarly with going down the path of exogenous Test, that's a lifetime commitment once you get going and not one to be taken lightly.

You're just starting, focus on the hard work and routine first (plus eating well which it sounds like you will, and getting good high quality sleep).

Also as someone just staring you have piles of each gains to make - newbie gains are a real thing and you should make easy progress for quite a while.
 
DunningKruger said:
Athletic, middle-aged female here. I preferred Tesa. When I used Ipa (even with Reta), it drastically increased my hunger signalling due to it working through the ghrelin pathway. I had better strength gains with Tesa while losing stubborn belly fat, even when I wasn't training as hard. If I hit my protein goal of 100-120g/ protein daily (tiny woman) I would see both hypertrophy and strength gains regardless of training frequency and intensity. It was worth the extra money.

When I used IPA (because I was being a cheap bastard) , I started seeing the issues that come with GH analogues, carpal tunnel, other tendon injuries that wouldn't heal with BPC/TB, parasthesia of both arms/hands every single morning, and edema if I missed a day due to travel. I never saw any of those side effects on Tesa.

Why increase protein gradually? The potential of the runs from not being used to taking in the intake? 💩

If I were starting from 0, I would start slow, because those tendons will need time to catch up to the strength gains you'll see with your muscles. When you feel like you can increase the weight, don't, have the discipline to hold there for a few weeks, despite how easy it seems.
I appreciate your response! Who has the other compound not the tess would give it to me for free that’s why I was considering. I appreciate your advice i’m leaning towards the tess for sure
 
ltjltj said:
100% agreed. Start your lifting program first, get that going. Hard work is a key part of this regardless. At 38 unless you have a negative IGF-1 z-score I'd probably leave the GH options alone (Tesa was awful for me, I tried because I had a negative z-score at 44). Similarly with going down the path of exogenous Test, that's a lifetime commitment once you get going and not one to be taken lightly.

You're just starting, focus on the hard work and routine first (plus eating well which it sounds like you will, and getting good high quality sleep).

Also as someone just staring you have piles of each gains to make - newbie gains are a real thing and you should make easy progress for quite a while.

I mean... I would get bloodwork first since it's easy and quickly quantifies variables instead of having to wonder. There's no advantage I see from waiting.

I've been hypogonadal for years, meaningfully started TRT this year... for dropping a good bit of weight while maintaining lean mass it made sense. Also should be helpful for putting on muscle when I get done cutting.

My baseline IGF1 Z is fairly strong at +1.4, so while I have Ipa and Tesa, they're on the back burner until conditions suggest a bigger benefit.
 
woundcarping said:
I mean... I would get bloodwork first since it's easy and quickly quantifies variables instead of having to wonder. There's no advantage I see from waiting.

I've been hypogonadal for years, meaningfully started TRT this year... for dropping a good bit of weight while maintaining lean mass it made sense. Also should be helpful for putting on muscle when I get done cutting.

My baseline IGF1 Z is fairly strong at +1.4, so while I have Ipa and Tesa, they're on the back burner until conditions suggest a bigger benefit.
Sure. I agree with getting the bloodwork, but also they should just start working out! Certainly they shouldn't be taking GH or Test without the lab results.
 
ltjltj said:
Sure. I agree with getting the bloodwork, but also they should just start working out! Certainly they shouldn't be taking GH or Test without the lab results.

I agree there's no downside to starting to lift. My thought was the way my brain works, I'd not want to think about the what ifs of my biology hampering my physical endeavors. Also, TRT has been good for me, and secretagogues aren't expected to be particularly helpful at this point in my journey.
 
Smiter said:
I have seen a lot of people here worry about high IGF-1 levels. Why is that?
Acromegaly on the high side, for the low side:

"High IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) levels typically indicate excessive growth hormone (GH) production, most commonly caused by a pituitary tumor, resulting in a condition called acromegaly. Problems associated with high IGF-1 include abnormal growth of organs and bones (especially in hands, feet, and face), severe fatigue, hypertension, joint pain, sleep apnea, diabetes, and increased risk of certain cancers. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]"
 
woundcarping said:
I agree there's no downside to starting to lift. My thought was the way my brain works, I'd not want to think about the what ifs of my biology hampering my physical endeavors. Also, TRT has been good for me, and secretagogues aren't expected to be particularly helpful at this point in my journey.
I'd been lifting for 4 years or so, finally got some lab tests done. Test and related hormones were all perfectly reasonable (middle of ranges, I'm not going exogenous at that point), IGF-1 was slightly negative z-score. I tried Tesa but had horrible impact on sleep and HRV so discontinued after 3 weeks.
 
Smiter said:
I have seen a lot of people here worry about high IGF-1 levels. Why is that?
Inversely correlated with longevity, higher cancer risk, acromegaly, etc... Don't push it to supra-physical levels.
 
ltjltj said:
Inversely correlated with longevity, higher cancer risk, acromegaly, etc... Don't push it to supra-physical levels.
Aah, ok, so it is as I expected. The same old anti-mTor targeting for longevity and the high amounts=Acromegaly organ growth like Andre the Giant. Same with the tumor thing.

woundcarping said:
High IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) levels typically indicate excessive growth hormone (GH) production, most commonly caused by a pituitary tumor, resulting in a condition called acromegaly. Problems associated with high IGF-1 include abnormal growth of organs and bones (especially in hands, feet, and face), severe fatigue, hypertension, joint pain, sleep apnea, diabetes, and increased risk of certain cancers
Yeah, that tracks. If the IGF high levels are due to high GH levels, all those sugar related issues, edema, etc., should be put to somatotropin, right? I've seen users using IGF-1 DES for spot injections for sensational effects. Along with Follistatin, the effects are surreal. The 30min half-life of DES, and the even more superior PEG MGF, makes it uber-beneficial, right? at least compared to any GH or secretagogues?
 
Smiter said:
Yeah, that tracks. If the IGF high levels are due to high GH levels, all those sugar related issues, edema, etc., should be put to somatotropin, right? I've seen users using IGF-1 DES for spot injections for sensational effects. Along with Follistatin, the effects are surreal. The 30min half-life of DES, and the even more superior PEG MGF, makes it uber-beneficial, right? at least compared to any GH or secretagogues?

That is entirely out of my current depth of knowledge.
 
woundcarping said:
That is entirely out of my current depth of knowledge.
Okay, I'm knackered with the flu but I will try. Somatomedin C or IGF-1 is a protein-hormone, governed normally by somatotropin aka GH. Here is a look at the average levels of IGF based on age.

16–24 years: \(182–780\text{ ng/mL}\)

25–39 years: \(114–492\text{ ng/mL}\)

40–54 years: \(90–360\text{ ng/mL}\)

55+ years: \(71–290\text{ ng/mL}\)

Now while high levels of IGF are ASSOCIATED with cancer, acromegaly, etc., low levels are associated with cardiovascular disease and mortality. Additionally, low levels of IGF, is clearly connected to sarcopenia or aging related muscle loss. In fact, the main reason Testosterone or AAS leads to muscle gain is because of IGF activity. Now, if someone already has a cancerous tumor in them, long-lasting IGF will cause proliferation. But, something like IGF DES which lasts only for 30 minutes, if injected to a muscle that has been exercised, elevates the muscle protein synthesis activity, without touching GH levels, sugar levels, etc.

Moreover, PEG-MGF treats sarcopenia, cardiac muscle damage, nerve damage,strengthening joints and tendons, AND ENABLES STEM CELL PROLIFERATION.
 
Pick up the big, heavy round circles. Repeatedly. Consistently. That is the 99% answer. Peptides will have a marginal effect at best.
 
TopLad said:
38M. Haven’t trained in years. 6 foot 2 200 lbs exact

I was more overweight and recently dropped a significant amount of weight (close to goal now) using retatrutide. The issue is I didn’t have much muscle to begin with, so now I look kind of “skinny fat” with a pretty blank slate body composition.

I’m about to start lifting and actually build a routine from scratch. Diet is under control, planning to increase protein and calories gradually.

Where I’m stuck is which peptide route to go, i’ve reviewed posts here and elsewhere just not sure should I consider:

CJC + Ipamorelin

Tesamorelin

Or anything else people think actually makes sense at this stage

Goal is simple: add lean muscle and not screw up the progress I’ve made.

For someone basically starting from zero muscle-wise after weight loss, what would you do?
Consume creatine, glutamine, and 30 grams of collagen, with hyaluronic acid and vitamin C, and focus on tendon strengthening exercise protocols for the first 6 weeks. The massive boost to long-term gains is absolutely VITAL.
 
gusterbuster said:
I'm going to say go straight hgh. Usually cheaper than tesa these days and we know it works. 2iu puts most people at the upper range.

Expect a few lbs of water retention which ever route you go.

And keep expectations realistic. None will grow any meaningful amount of muscle on its own. At most keeps muscles looking slightly fuller. The effects are subtle and discreet. Slightly improved recover, strengthening of connective tissue, etc. Lipolysis is pretty overrated. Yes has small impact but cheaper and more aggressive ways to obtain that.
I kind of want to avoid it, I had heart problems in the past (enlarged heart high blood pressure etc) and it scares me. I figure if my body naturally produced more with a little poke it would be better but what do i know lol. I’m going to do some more research but appreciate the suggestion.
 
TopLad said:
I kind of want to avoid it, I had heart problems in the past (enlarged heart high blood pressure etc) and it scares me. I figure if my body naturally produced more with a little poke it would be better but what do i know lol. I’m going to do some more research but appreciate the suggestion.
I, too, want to avoid GH at all costs. The sides are so tacky. But my main reasoning is that most of the positives of GH can be obtained by other stuff, so logically, it would make sense to use them instead of GH, to avoid the negative sides. I had high BP and diabetes in the past so I really dont wanna mess with that.
 
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