SnackGirl
Active member
I'm seeing some companies pushing oral tirzepatide instead of the usual shots. Some folks are immediately calling it a scam and saying the providers are ruining their reputation.
I did a quick search and found:
* Peptides in pill form are tricky because the GI tract breaks them down.
* But there's an oral semaglutide tablet approved for treating diabetes. Studies show it's not quite as effective for weight loss as the injectable version, but still better than liraglutide. It's just as good for diabetes though.
* Oral sema is dosed at 14mg/day compared to 0.5mg/week in shot form. So, it seems like they're giving you a much larger dose and hoping a small percentage survives the GI tract and works like a shot.
* I saw a company rep mention their oral tirzepatide is sublingual, so it absorbs in the mouth instead of the stomach.
So, is oral tirzepatide a total scam, or is it just an experimental form of the drug that needs more research to prove it works as well as the injections?
I'm good on tirz for a while, but I'm wondering if these telehealth providers are pulling a fast one, or if a sublingual or high-dose tablet form of tirz might actually be effective.
I did a quick search and found:
* Peptides in pill form are tricky because the GI tract breaks them down.
* But there's an oral semaglutide tablet approved for treating diabetes. Studies show it's not quite as effective for weight loss as the injectable version, but still better than liraglutide. It's just as good for diabetes though.
* Oral sema is dosed at 14mg/day compared to 0.5mg/week in shot form. So, it seems like they're giving you a much larger dose and hoping a small percentage survives the GI tract and works like a shot.
* I saw a company rep mention their oral tirzepatide is sublingual, so it absorbs in the mouth instead of the stomach.
So, is oral tirzepatide a total scam, or is it just an experimental form of the drug that needs more research to prove it works as well as the injections?
I'm good on tirz for a while, but I'm wondering if these telehealth providers are pulling a fast one, or if a sublingual or high-dose tablet form of tirz might actually be effective.