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Fat Loss & Metabolism

Semaglutide

Ozempic · Wegovy · Rybelsus · GLP-1 agonist
FDA-approved mainstream subQ injection / oral tablet

What it is

Semaglutide is a long-acting analog of GLP-1, a hormone your gut releases after eating. The synthetic version is engineered to resist breakdown so a single weekly injection produces sustained appetite suppression and improved insulin function. FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes (Ozempic, 2017), chronic weight management (Wegovy, 2021), and cardiovascular risk reduction (2024).

How it works

Semaglutide does several things simultaneously:

The result is reduced calorie intake driven by reduced appetite, not willpower. People typically lose 14–15% of body weight in clinical trials, and far more if combined with proper diet and exercise.

Benefits

Timeline

Week 1–4
Appetite suppression begins. Common nausea during titration.
Week 4–8
3–5% weight loss; "food noise" clearly reduced.
Week 12–20
8–12% weight loss; need active resistance training to preserve muscle.
Week 60+
Peak weight loss (~15% body weight in trials). Plateau hits around month 14.

Dosing & titration

Starting dose0.25 mg subQ once weekly
Standard titration0.25 → 0.5 → 1.0 → 1.7 → 2.4 mg, increasing every 4 weeks
Max weight-loss dose2.4 mg/week (Wegovy label)
Diabetes doseOften 0.5–1.0 mg/week (Ozempic label)
Oral formRybelsus, 7–14 mg daily on empty stomach
When to titrate upOnly after 4 weeks at current dose with tolerable side effects. If nausea is rough, stay at the same dose another month.

Side effects & risks

Critical: Eat 1g of protein per pound of body weight and lift 3+ days/week, or you'll lose ~30–40% of weight loss as muscle. Black-box warning for medullary thyroid carcinoma in animals; contraindicated in MEN-2 history. Don't combine with insulin or sulfonylureas without close glucose monitoring.

Typical price

$200–$1,400/mo Compounded semaglutide: $200–$400/mo. Branded (Ozempic/Wegovy) without insurance: $1,000–$1,400/mo. Compounded availability has narrowed sharply since 2024 FDA enforcement.

Studies

Educational reference only. Not medical advice. Semaglutide is FDA-approved but requires a prescription and ongoing medical monitoring.