
Ozempic Weight Loss Study Shows 75 Percent Regain Within 15 Months Without Lifestyle Changes
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A recent analysis from the University of Cambridge, published in eClinicalMedicine, reveals that people stopping Ozempic-like drugs such as semaglutide and tirzepatide retain about twenty-five percent of their lost weight up to one year later. However, researchers note a key uncertainty: much of the weight loss during treatment, potentially forty to sixty percent, may come from lean muscle mass rather than fat, and it remains unclear if regained weight restores muscle proportionately. The study, reviewing six high-quality randomized controlled trials with over three thousand two hundred participants, found rapid initial regain slowing over time, with sixty percent of lost weight back after one year and projections of seventy-five percent by fifteen months. Medical researcher Brajan Budini explains that these drugs mimic glucagon-like peptide-one, curbing appetite like brakes, but stopping them leads to quick rebound unless paired with diet and exercise.
Contrasting this, a Cleveland Clinic study published in Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, analyzing nearly eight thousand patients, shows more optimistic real-world outcomes. Patients who discontinued semaglutide or tirzepatide regained little weight on average after one year, with obesity patients holding onto most of their eight point four percent loss and diabetes patients even shedding more. Doctor Hamlet Gasoyan attributes this to many restarting medication, switching treatments, or adopting lifestyle changes, countering clinical trial data where over half the weight returns without intervention. Cost and side effects drive most discontinuations, yet forty-five percent of obesity patients stabilized or continued losing weight.
Safety concerns persist, as the United Kingdom's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency warned on March second that semaglutide may rarely link to nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, a sudden vision loss condition. Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration admonished Novo Nordisk on March twelfth for failing to report potential side effects timely. Ongoing lawsuits focus on gastroparesis and these eye risks, with multidistrict litigation growing amid reports of stomach paralysis from higher doses.
No fresh comments from Oprah Winfrey on Ozempic emerged this week, though her past stance rejects body shame in weight discussions.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe, come back next week for more, and remember, this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai.
Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs
For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Contrasting this, a Cleveland Clinic study published in Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, analyzing nearly eight thousand patients, shows more optimistic real-world outcomes. Patients who discontinued semaglutide or tirzepatide regained little weight on average after one year, with obesity patients holding onto most of their eight point four percent loss and diabetes patients even shedding more. Doctor Hamlet Gasoyan attributes this to many restarting medication, switching treatments, or adopting lifestyle changes, countering clinical trial data where over half the weight returns without intervention. Cost and side effects drive most discontinuations, yet forty-five percent of obesity patients stabilized or continued losing weight.
Safety concerns persist, as the United Kingdom's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency warned on March second that semaglutide may rarely link to nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, a sudden vision loss condition. Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration admonished Novo Nordisk on March twelfth for failing to report potential side effects timely. Ongoing lawsuits focus on gastroparesis and these eye risks, with multidistrict litigation growing amid reports of stomach paralysis from higher doses.
No fresh comments from Oprah Winfrey on Ozempic emerged this week, though her past stance rejects body shame in weight discussions.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe, come back next week for more, and remember, this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai.
Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs
For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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