Sorry to hear you had such a bad reaction to it. My experience has been very positive. |
+1 Gross |
I have no issues about being on a medication for life, since I’m on a statin and a thyroid medication for life. But I hate the Ozempic-face look — thinking that I want to be on it but at a low dose that has only marginal efficacy but also marginal side effects. I am a muscular, cardio-fit guy 63-year-old with OK bloodwork measures (10% heart attack risk) but a BMI in the obese range. Thoughts? |
No one but experienced and specialized medical professionals should be commenting on this topic. |
I don't think anyone is using this site, or Reddit which is full of many threads on the topic, as a place for actual medical advice. But it is useful to know how other patients' experiences have been. As for op's question, the answer is very obviously yes, people have. A room full of such people were at the Golden Globes yesterday, an event ironically sponsored by Lilly. |
Hi, it's not. I was in my office Friday morning feeling disgusted with myself for already not sticking to my New Year's resolution of eating better and losing weight, and I posted here, then got to googling the local medspa which has been heavily advertising semaglutides. Watched some of their compelling testimonial videos. Called them, they offered an appointment same-day, which I then changed to the next day. Had my consultation and had the shot before I left. Like I said, I was taken aback that there seemed to be no criteria I had to meet to qualify for the meds. I've entered my info into different virtual pharmacies online, Noom, etc. and it's always come back with "Sorry you don't qualify because your BMI is under xxx." Taken aback, but really, appreciative. I came there to get meds and they gave me meds, pretty much no questions asked (a few questions about allergies, if I exercise and explaining that exercise is important because you can lose muscle when you lose weight quickly, explaining the difference between the semaglutide and the tirzepatide, how much I wanted to lose, how dosing works). Day 3 today. Woke up with the same very mild nausea that I've had since yesterday. I did feel like I needed to eat something, but not in the same way I normally do, where I debate with myself, how long can I wait before I eat, how little can I eat and still feel okay, should I just blow it today and get a sausage egg biscuit at McDonalds? That's my constant "food noise" that I'm always fighting (unsuccessfully). It's so miraculous feeling that I'm now just thinking, "What can I eat that will nourish me and hopefully take away the nausea?" I made myself a peanut butter banana smoothie and drank 3/4 of it. I enjoyed it, but not passionately like I usually love food. I'm just very excited and happy right now. I have been thinking and reading about this for a year and kept thinking I don't want to resort to meds, I'm a smart, successful person I know I can do this on my own. I know what I have to do. I think my last straw was making a plan for what I was going to do on January 1 and failing miserably, giving in to cravings and my binge tendencies, and just deciding I want help. I am really glad I did it! Thanks to everyone who has chimed in with similar goals; I would love to keep hearing them, and I'll update here. I really hope this can reset my mind and that I won't revert back to my horrible eating when I go off these meds. I weighed myself this morning and was 142...so I think I'll be at my goal weight in under 2 months if I keep feeling the way I feel now. |
OP responding to this, 3 days in. Do you speak from experience? In my case, the drug has indeed changed, almost instantly, my thought process about food, and it has given me willpower. Actually, it doesn't even feel like willpower because I'm not fighting cravings/obsessive thoughts about food. Those things have disappeared, and so willpower is unnecessary. I fear you are right about not being all good once I stop the meds, but time will tell. |
I’m not confused. I am taking 80MG statin for high cholesterol. My friend—who had a high BMI—didn’t have high cholesterol or high blood pressure. It now looks like they are underweight. Yet, they can continue taking it at 20 (or less) BMI but I cannot. If I can’t take it at 26 BMI, why can someone keep taking it at 20 BMI? I’m truly happy for them. I’m not saying they should stop taking it if they don’t want to. Like someone said earlier, I just don’t understand the gatekeeping. OP, I hope it works out for you! |
Plenty of prescriptions are for off label uses. Once generic versions of Ozempic are approved, everyone will use that for weight loss instead of paying hundreds of dollars for name brand wegovy. Having said that, I would not take compounded meds for 15 pounds. That’s too risky for me. |
To hear OP tell it, there is no”gate keeping” at all. |
PP following up: It’s a triple drug combo where I go: phentermine, carbidopa, 5Htp. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pharmacology/articles/10.3389/fphar.2019.01327/full |
I'm still on the meds out of fear. I love how I look and feel and am scared to regress if I stop taking them. I've remained at a low dose I (got up to .5, but now I'm back at .25 and holding as I'm at my ideal weight and don't want to lose anymore) and haven't had any of the adverse side effects that other people have mentioned other than a nauseous feeling the first couple of weeks. |
Very reasonable stance. Doctors should explain (and quantify) the risks and let you choose whether you want to take or not. |
No, all doctors don't need to write prescriptions for off-label uses they don't support. In any event, it sounds like you will have trouble finding someone more flexible in her approach. |
The "ozempic face look" is just weight loss. Many people who are overweight look older and a bit tired when they lose the fat in their face. It is nothing specific to Wegovy/Ozempic. There is no guarantee of "marginal side effects" with a "low dose." Like many meds, some suffer horribly from side effects, some have few or none. I started Wegovy with a BMI of 34. I'm down to 29, and still losing, and my doctor advises I will be on it for life. I have had bad side effects, but for me it is worth it. I feel sooooo much better in my body with that weight gone. YMMV. |