Compounded tirz blues? Red Rock switch-up

ToneMode

Member
I switched to 5mg of tirz from Red Rock mixed with glycine Saturday morning after using Eli Lilly's 2.5mg. It's like it's not even there. The food cravings are intense, I'm hungry again, and I feel inflamed. I have one more dose left in the vial, but I'm thinking of just switching to the other stuff I have. Anyone else had similar issues with compounded tirz? Is the other stuff better, you think?
 
Just finish what you have then start the other stuff. Give you a little time to research more about it and buy what you need if you don't have it.
 
If you already have your other research material, and you're ready to mix it properly (including online calculators), and you have the lab analysis showing what's in your grey tirz for calculations...then ditch the Red Rock batch. The delay isn't worth the trouble of injecting something that clearly doesn't work.

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Weird. I was on compounded Red Rock for the first couple of months and it worked great for me. But everyone is different, I guess.
 
I just received my first shipment yesterday and I'm pretty excited to start. I went with an online clinic and the whole process was smooth. The packaging was good and everything was cold when it arrived. It was easier than I thought it would be!
 
TrimSis said:
Red Rock through my doctor worked well, but the cost became too much as my dose went higher. Just started the gray market stuff; so far, so good.

That's the problem, isn't it? Access and affordability. But everyone needs to be super careful with the compounded stuff. There are some big concerns about safety and quality compared to the FDA-approved meds. The Obesity Society had a whole meeting about it.
 
I've maintained 15mg for a while. Attempted 17.5mg over four weeks without seeing much change, so I dropped back. Should've probably waited longer but didn't want to burn through supplies pointlessly. I recall that before the shutdown, compounding pharmacies-Mochi and Red Rock-had options at higher levels. Lilly hasn't released those because their clinical testing on elevated dosages won't wrap until next year.
 
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