Tricks to get out of Reta and other GLP1s

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Omxxl

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Weaning off Retatrutide is a long process and requires following a protocol. I don't dare to start until after summer, but I have the following protocol for weaning off Retatrutide; let me know what you think.

Keep this in mind:

Retatrutide has a half-life of 6 days, so abruptly stopping it leaves a diminishing residual effect for 3-4 weeks (there's no "clean break").

Appetite, suppressed for months, returns gradually. Real (homeostatic) hunger returns before sensory satiety (you need to relearn satiety signals).

Leptin and ghrelin return to their natural levels 4-8 weeks after stopping Retatrutide. If you don't control your intake during this period, weight regain is almost guaranteed.

Nutritional strategy during weaning:

Stable macros (don't change):

Protein: 180-200 g/day (never lower this; it's for satiety and muscle preservation).

Carbs: 200-250 g/day.

Fat: 70-80 g/day.

Fiber: 35-40 g/day (key for satiety without food restriction).

Satiety tricks to partially replace food restriction:

Volume without calories: large salads, clear soups, plenty of vegetables at each main meal. They fill the stomach, activating mechanical satiety.

Protein at the beginning of each meal: eat protein first, then vegetables, then carbohydrates. This activates satiety hormones (PYY, CCK) more efficiently than the reverse order.

Meals at fixed times: hormonal appetite synchronizes with schedules. 5 meals/day at consistent times avoids erratic hunger pangs.

Hydration: 3 L of water/day minimum. Thirst is often mistaken for hunger, especially when appetite returns after months of suppression.

Coffee and tea: caffeine slightly suppresses appetite. 2-3 cups of coffee a day are your ally for 5-10 weeks.

Pre-meal soluble fiber: 5 g of psyllium or glucomannan 20 minutes before the main meal. Activates gastric satiety. It's the closest thing to "mimicking" part of the Reta effect without the drug.

Extra supplementation during withdrawal:

Maintain everything you're already taking + add the following during the 12 weeks:

Berberine 500 mg x 2-3/day with meals. Improves insulin sensitivity (partially replaces one of Reta's beneficial effects on blood sugar).

Glucomannan 1 g before lunch and dinner. Adds mechanical satiety.

L-tyrosine 500 mg on an empty stomach. Supports thyroid and dopamine (Reta modulates the dopaminergic system; upon withdrawal, some experience mild, transient apathy; tyrosine helps).

Chromium picolinate 200 mcg/day. Modulates carbohydrate cravings.
 
Omxxl said:
Weaning off Retatrutide is a long process and requires following a protocol. I don't dare to start until after summer, but I have the following protocol for weaning off Retatrutide; let me know what you think.

Keep this in mind:

Retatrutide has a half-life of 6 days, so abruptly stopping it leaves a diminishing residual effect for 3-4 weeks (there's no "clean break").

Appetite, suppressed for months, returns gradually. Real (homeostatic) hunger returns before sensory satiety (you need to relearn satiety signals).

Leptin and ghrelin return to their natural levels 4-8 weeks after stopping Retatrutide. If you don't control your intake during this period, weight regain is almost guaranteed.

Nutritional strategy during weaning:

Stable macros (don't change):

Protein: 180-200 g/day (never lower this; it's for satiety and muscle preservation).

Carbs: 200-250 g/day.

Fat: 70-80 g/day.

Fiber: 35-40 g/day (key for satiety without food restriction).

Satiety tricks to partially replace food restriction:

Volume without calories: large salads, clear soups, plenty of vegetables at each main meal. They fill the stomach, activating mechanical satiety.

Protein at the beginning of each meal: eat protein first, then vegetables, then carbohydrates. This activates satiety hormones (PYY, CCK) more efficiently than the reverse order.

Meals at fixed times: hormonal appetite synchronizes with schedules. 5 meals/day at consistent times avoids erratic hunger pangs.

Hydration: 3 L of water/day minimum. Thirst is often mistaken for hunger, especially when appetite returns after months of suppression.

Coffee and tea: caffeine slightly suppresses appetite. 2-3 cups of coffee a day are your ally for 5-10 weeks.

Pre-meal soluble fiber: 5 g of psyllium or glucomannan 20 minutes before the main meal. Activates gastric satiety. It's the closest thing to "mimicking" part of the Reta effect without the drug.

Extra supplementation during withdrawal:

Maintain everything you're already taking + add the following during the 12 weeks:

Berberine 500 mg x 2-3/day with meals. Improves insulin sensitivity (partially replaces one of Reta's beneficial effects on blood sugar).

Glucomannan 1 g before lunch and dinner. Adds mechanical satiety.

L-tyrosine 500 mg on an empty stomach. Supports thyroid and dopamine (Reta modulates the dopaminergic system; upon withdrawal, some experience mild, transient apathy; tyrosine helps).

Chromium picolinate 200 mcg/day. Modulates carbohydrate cravings.
These measurements of carbohydrates, protein, and other things are for a person like me weighing 84 kg
 
Currently on a 3 week brake, going to start again soon. Why stop and not go down in dosage? Is it side effects or did you achieve your goals?
 
Waterheater said:
Currently on a 3 week brake, going to start again soon. Why stop and not go down in dosage? Is it side effects or did you achieve your goals?
I almost reached my goals
 
I think your result will depend on where you were before reta. If you're a bodybuilder who was normal weight and you used reta for a "cut" phase then I suspect your approach will work well and allow you to gain muscle as you bulk. If you were obese prior to reta then I suspect you've selected a path that will help you return to obesity quicker than average.
 
tubby said:
I think your result will depend on where you were before reta. If you're a bodybuilder who was normal weight and you used reta for a "cut" phase then I suspect your approach will work well and allow you to gain muscle as you bulk. If you were obese prior to reta then I suspect you've selected a path that will help you return to obesity quicker than average.
Absolutely ! I was going to say that in my case I'll be on something like these drugs for life, they've transformed my health and relationship with food. Different if a small amount was used as a bodybuilding cut helper though and I can see stopping then.
 
While I feel like I have changed my eating habits I am worried that when the food noise returns I will fall back to the old ways. I can see myself on a low dose for a very long time of not the rest of my life.
 
If you were white-knuckling through good noise before then that is what you will go back to doing. If “just have some discipline” was ever actually an answer, then very few people would have had a problem in the first place.

I enjoy being able to come here and say this in solidarity with all the people fighting obesity, as I was never even technically overweight according to BMI standards. But being particularly short meant that I needed to do every single thing 100% correct 100% of the time with regards to eating and exercise in order to lose half a pound a week. That simply wasn’t realistic between the rest of my life needing my time and attention and my sweet tooth sabotaging my perfect eating habits at least a few times a week.

With GLP1s I can exercise for muscle a few mornings a week, prioritize protein and making sure I get the right vitamins, and otherwise go on with my life and yet STILL lose or maintain my weight, depending on what I’m trying to do.

If people want to try to wean off, they can but realistically this will mean more time, attention, and commitment. It is totally understandable that not everyone has that to give.

I also have ADHD. Can I make my life workable without stimulant meds? Sure. If I want to exhaust myself writing extra reminder notes and using other learned skills that are exhausting to implement day in and day out just so I can appear to have a level of executive function that has always alluded me. But by the end of the work day I have nothing left to give to friends or family. So, like with GLP1s it is about trade offs.
 
ambot88 said:
That all sounds reasonable but just seems like a lot more effort than maintaining a smallish dose until I die.
I've heard the studies show staying on works best and receptivity goes down not up after a break. Long term staying on is best especially if you had severe obesity.
 
Waterheater said:
Currently on a 3 week brake, going to start again soon. Why stop and not go down in dosage? Is it side effects or did you achieve your goals?
Did you rotate down at all before stopping ? I’ve been taking lower doses the last two weeks and this Monday I’m only pinnning 1/2 mg before I take off out of the country for a month. I will still be active at the gym 3-4 times a week while I’m gone and eating decent as well so hoping I don’t balloon up lol. Did you notice any weight gains after stopping ?
 
Omxxl said:
Weaning off Retatrutide is a long process and requires following a protocol. I don't dare to start until after summer, but I have the following protocol for weaning off Retatrutide; let me know what you think.

Keep this in mind:

Retatrutide has a half-life of 6 days, so abruptly stopping it leaves a diminishing residual effect for 3-4 weeks (there's no "clean break").

Appetite, suppressed for months, returns gradually. Real (homeostatic) hunger returns before sensory satiety (you need to relearn satiety signals).

Leptin and ghrelin return to their natural levels 4-8 weeks after stopping Retatrutide. If you don't control your intake during this period, weight regain is almost guaranteed.

Nutritional strategy during weaning:

Stable macros (don't change):

Protein: 180-200 g/day (never lower this; it's for satiety and muscle preservation).

Carbs: 200-250 g/day.

Fat: 70-80 g/day.

Fiber: 35-40 g/day (key for satiety without food restriction).

Satiety tricks to partially replace food restriction:

Volume without calories: large salads, clear soups, plenty of vegetables at each main meal. They fill the stomach, activating mechanical satiety.

Protein at the beginning of each meal: eat protein first, then vegetables, then carbohydrates. This activates satiety hormones (PYY, CCK) more efficiently than the reverse order.

Meals at fixed times: hormonal appetite synchronizes with schedules. 5 meals/day at consistent times avoids erratic hunger pangs.

Hydration: 3 L of water/day minimum. Thirst is often mistaken for hunger, especially when appetite returns after months of suppression.

Coffee and tea: caffeine slightly suppresses appetite. 2-3 cups of coffee a day are your ally for 5-10 weeks.

Pre-meal soluble fiber: 5 g of psyllium or glucomannan 20 minutes before the main meal. Activates gastric satiety. It's the closest thing to "mimicking" part of the Reta effect without the drug.

Extra supplementation during withdrawal:

Maintain everything you're already taking + add the following during the 12 weeks:

Berberine 500 mg x 2-3/day with meals. Improves insulin sensitivity (partially replaces one of Reta's beneficial effects on blood sugar).

Glucomannan 1 g before lunch and dinner. Adds mechanical satiety.

L-tyrosine 500 mg on an empty stomach. Supports thyroid and dopamine (Reta modulates the dopaminergic system; upon withdrawal, some experience mild, transient apathy; tyrosine helps).

Chromium picolinate 200 mcg/day. Modulates carbohydrate cravings.
Since you brought it up, I'll add this. There is a thing called the satiety index, just like the insulin index and glycemic index. Eating more high-satiety foods and doing one's level best to NOT MIX carbs and fats in a single dish, should also help. It has been found that mixing carbs and fat lowers the satiety value to less than that of the separate ingredients.
 
Omxxl said:
I'll stop for a few months and come back on a cyclical basis; I have to get rid of my 700 mg of reta hahaha
I got you mate, I have an address for the perfect disposal facility, in Virginia. I'll do it for you, free of cost. I'm benevolent that way. Send it there.
 
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