I had serious problems with this too. Bismuth subsalicylate completely turned it around for me. I've taken just half a pill in the morning when I could feel them starting and they were totally gone after a couple hours. Game changer honestly.
I've done five blood panels since starting back in Dec 23, and honestly the only real changes were my ALT and AST - those numbers dropped a ton. Everything else stayed right in the normal range the whole time.
Like borrowing someone's key to unlock your door - works great for their house but maybe not yours. Same med, different bodies. Nothing wrong with that.
That's awesome, thanks for sharing! If you don't mind, it'd help a lot of newcomers to hear specifics about your medication, your measurements, and how much weight you've dropped so far. People like me who are just getting started really benefit from seeing what actually works for others in real situations.
Just had bloodwork done, my hematocrit was slightly under normal at 41% and my red blood cells dipped to 4.38. Aside from that, all markers were fine. Probably because I skip red meat - too expensive so I rely on fish and poultry for protein.
seven weeks in and starting yesterday my appetite came roaring back like nothing i've ever felt. my stomach hurt from how hungry i was. weird thing is i'm not skipping meals or anything, i had real food, snacks, even grabbed some cookies later. same thing today. has anyone else had their appetite randomly spike like this? been at the lower dose for five weeks and bumped up two weeks ago.
i pinned 3x a week, never timing it around workouts. just whenever—sometimes hours before, sometimes after. my original was friday 8am, sunday 2pm, tuesday 8pm. felt nothing from it. creatine didn't help me either, actually tanked my liver enzymes.
The convenience-first rotation approach works well for subQ - stomach, upper arm, and thigh all give consistent absorption. The main practice is avoiding the same spot repeatedly to prevent site buildup.
The emotional flattening - being unbothered with things that used to engage you - is a recognized pattern on tirzepatide, particularly in the first months or at higher doses. GLP-1 receptor signaling in the limbic system affects motivational circuits as well as appetite circuits; they're adjacent systems. For most people it stabilizes within the first 3-5 months. If it persists or deepens into actual isolation rather than just lowered reactivity, dose review is worth a prescriber conversation.
Telehealth provider selection matters more than most people realize when starting out. The main things worth vetting: how responsive they are to dose adjustment requests (some require a visit for every bump, others do it by message), what they do when you hit a stall or have side effects, and whether they're willing to consider compounded options if branded supply becomes an issue. Precision Telemed has been in threads here before - searching the provider name in this forum will give you real experience reports from members rather than what the site says. The quality gap between providers is significant, and the cheapest option isn't always the one with the best outcome. Telehealth providers that are primarily volume-focused tend to give standard responses regardless of individual situation.
Emotional waves in the first week are more common than people warn you about. The hormonal disruption from appetite suppression can hit mood before anything physical shows up. The perimenopause question is worth keeping separate - the sobbing for no reason early on is a known thing. It passes.
congrats on the progress! quick question though, i just started mj in the uk and keep seeing people mention some app. is that something anyone can use if theyre on mj? curious what it does.
A 30ml BAC bottle over most of a year is a useful data point on shelf life - the bacteriostatic concentration holds longer than the conservative 6-month guidance suggests.
The double scam pattern on vial vendors when starting out is common - one no-delivery and one low-quality product is the typical initiation. Community-verified sources reduce that risk significantly.
Straight acetic acid at 0.6% is a legitimate reconstitution solvent - the antimicrobial properties of BAC aren't necessary if you're going through the vial within a few weeks, and some people find the absence of preservatives reduces injection site irritation.