The active molecule is measured in micrograms - the actual drug content is invisible to the eye. What you see in the vial is mostly the carrier and stabilizer fill, which stays relatively consistent across dose sizes. This is normal.
Yeah, that's what I'm worried about, HeartCoffee. I've heard some people stay on a maintenance dose long-term to manage cravings. Maybe that's the way to go?
Seven months is great! I started using a telehealth provider. Kinda curious what it's gonna be like when I stop taking the medication... anyone have experience with that?
Eat a bunch of sugar-free sweets! Sugar alcohols have a laxative effect. Some other artificial sweeteners like allulose and xylitol can have that effect too.
I read a study that said vitamin D supplementation alone doesn't really boost weight loss, but some women did better when they had enough vitamin D in their system. Maybe getting your levels tested is a good step?
Download a free calorie tracker app and track everything you eat for a week. Don't change anything, just log every bite and drink. It's just for yourself, no one else needs to see it, and don't continue after that week. This will show you your daily calorie intake. If it's more than 1200, keep...
I've experienced this too. My dietitian suggested I might have a very adaptable metabolism. A continuous glucose monitor helped me figure things out, though it might be less helpful if you're already on something to stabilize your blood sugar. For me, the biggest takeaways were big blood sugar...
That NA-931, also called bioglutide, looks sus. Seems like vaporware to me.
https://ausaminos.com/blog/the-bioglutide-scam-lies-and-fraud-at-biomed-industries/