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GLP-1 is a naturally occurring hormone regulating blood sugar, satiety, and gastric emptying. Some people simply don't have enough naturally (which can be a result of diet composition and lifestyle -- there are diet and behaviour modifications to increase your natural production) and artificial supplementation is beneficial.

The overwhelming benefits from GLP-1 are courtesy of weight loss and better blood sugar control. Get those two things under control, with or without GLP-1 drugs, and an enormous array of complications are made less likely.

For people with healthy, ideal diets at an optimal weight and with good blood sugar control, there are only remote, hypothetical benefits. There is some evidence it reduces inflammation and might ward off neurodegenerative disorders, but those likely have more of a relationship with blood sugar spikes, and again lifestyle changes are more impactful.



This is absolutely correct. I couldn’t have said it better myself.

(Except I’ll note that’s true for more than one hormone, as tirzepatide is both a GLP1 and GIP agonist, and I believe retatrutide is also Glucagon?)


"Incretins" is the keyword here.


Indeed! Thank you!


I agree with most of what you are saying but we should also be clear that there some sources of inflammation that are not caused (or fixed) by diet and lifestyle. There is huge upside for some serious chronic conditions that may be helped by GLP-1 but we are still early on in studies for these things.


I need to ask: What is it with HN attracting the "inflammation explains everything" crowd whenever there is a discussion about medical topics? I don't understand it. Is there any hard science behind all these explanations of phenom via the inflammation pathway? Or is this just another seed oil conspiracy theory?


Why in the world did you post this in reply to my comment? Obviously you have some weird hangup, and the fact that I mentioned inflammation quite literally in passing triggered you.

Yes, inflammation is a thing in the medical world. There are actual tests to measure it. Having higher levels is generally considered a negative indicator.




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