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What Ozempic does to the gut-brain axis

61 pointsby randycupertinoyesterday at 9:34 PM129 commentsview on HN

Comments

dirtbagskieryesterday at 10:00 PM

I'd take them even if they didn't make me lose weight - and I'm the type of person that doesn't like takeing Tylenol unless absolutely necessary.

The best way I can describe it: my body and mind are no longer is in starvation mode. I plan, do, act and sleep well.

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joshuamcginnisyesterday at 10:41 PM

Studies show almost all subjects regained the weight and reversed gains within 2 years. This means underlying issues (e.g., food addiction) aren't being addressed. Short of changing habits, the only maintenance solution is lifelong drug use and that doesn't sit well with me.

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hellzbellz123yesterday at 10:32 PM

As a habitual habit developer, Im keeping my hopes up that in 5 or 10 years, this is something that can help me and many others.

I've read experiences from people on illicit substances that claimed they helped them quit.

It would be beat if this carried over to things like caffeine/nicotine/thc/etc.

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zhivotayesterday at 10:33 PM

Tirzepatide at 1mg/week reduced my muscle soreness. I felt less depressed but this might just have been situational because I've been plagued by bad soreness after working out for years.

Unfortunately after twelve weeks I had to stop because I felt a lot of nausea and tenderness in my upper abdomen, and was worried it might be pancreatitis developing. I'm not sure why it would happen at such a low dose but the symptoms reduced pretty quickly as it wore off.

I may go back on later with a dose spread over a longer period with the hypothesis that the drug has a longer half life in my body and what I experienced was a gradual build up. Considering I lost 15 pounds over 3 months as well, I believe this to be very plausible.

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storusyesterday at 10:35 PM

Metabolic theories of mental illnesses and cancer are seriously understudied.

devcatapultyesterday at 11:03 PM

What about the reports of bone density loss? Any downsides to this?

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y-curiousyesterday at 10:28 PM

I got severely downvoted in the past for badmouthing GLP1s here. Then I did my research, got on them and I take it all back. These things are on par with statins in terms of potential societal impacts.

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OptionOfTyesterday at 11:02 PM

My insurance stopped covering, now I'm looking at $450 for Zepbound / month. Just the weight coming back is making me more depressed...

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jbird99yesterday at 10:23 PM

Could be related to endorphins and BDNF, similar to the effect from fasting.

dyauspitryesterday at 11:08 PM

What’s the downside to this magical drug. There has to be a downside…

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replwoacauseyesterday at 11:03 PM

Hasn't done jack shit for my depression.

Also worth mentioning GLP1's are known to cause anhedonia. So there's that...

crooked-vyesterday at 10:44 PM

I'm curious if this post will also have the same phenomena I've seen before of people springing out of the woodwork to post moralizing comments about people shouldn't rely on drugs, about how actually GLP-1s are bad because they don't fix problems indefinitely with a single dose, about how people should fix their problems by just having more willpower, talking about 'but what about the unknown side effects?' of drugs that have been in use for twenty years already, etc.

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vladmkyesterday at 10:05 PM

Mice are not people, but interesting link

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metalmanyesterday at 11:01 PM

so, the whole mouse thing is a scam, and now they are openly testing on us, first, and publishing in psychology today to see if we notice.fiendish.