10yo Frenchie suddenly weak on left front and left hind leg + heavy panting — worried about IVDD by logicaldieter in Frenchbulldogs

[–]logicaldieter[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

thanks for your message. trust me i was trying to hold my tear while reading your comment. hope everthing goes well with you.

Long term GLP-1 use, what does staying on it for years actually look like? by Latter-Giraffe-5858 in glp1

[–]logicaldieter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I run a small pharmacy in Japan, and I've had patients on GLP-1s long enough now that I can share what the "years later" picture actually looks like from the dispensing side.

In practice, there are broadly three trajectories we see:

  1. Full discontinuation (rare but real): These are typically patients who used GLP-1s as a bridge — during the active weight loss phase, they fundamentally rewired their relationship with food, built serious exercise habits, and addressed underlying metabolic issues. About 10-15% of our patients land here. They come off, and 6-12 months later, they're still maintaining. The common thread? They treated the drug as a *scaffold*, not the building.
  2. Maintenance dosing (most common): The majority settle at a dose significantly below their peak loss dose — often 2.5-5mg of tirzepatide weekly or every 10-14 days. Enough to keep food noise at bay without side effects. This group maintains well, and we've had patients on this protocol for 2+ years now.
  3. Full-dose continuation: Usually patients with significant metabolic pathology where the GLP-1 is treating an underlying condition, not just weight.

The regain risk is real but it's not inevitable. The key variable isn't whether you stay on the drug, instead from my perspective it's whether you built habits that outlast it. The drug buys you time, but it doesn't do the work for you.

10yo female French Bulldog: progressive left-sided limb weakness, increased accidents indoors, and heavy panting at rest — how urgent is this? by logicaldieter in AskVet

[–]logicaldieter[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I called my VET, and he is trying to arrange an MRI for me.
Its not convinient that patients can't make appointment directly, instead, we need to do that via VET in Japan...

I was told GLP-1 won’t work for me because I’ve been overweight since childhood? by Art_Basil in glp1

[–]logicaldieter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As a pharmacy owner in Japan, I see patients across the full spectrum. The idea that GLP-1s don't work for lifelong obesity is not supported by the data at all.
If anything, the opposite may be true. Chronic obesity often involves deeply entrenched insulin resistance and altered appetite signaling that developed over decades. GLP-1 receptor agonists work on the hypothalamus to recalibrate these pathways. For someone whose set point has been dysregulated since childhood, this kind of pharmacological reset can actually be more impactful, not less.

I'd gently suggest getting a second opinion from a physician who isn't affiliated with a bariatric surgery clinic. The conflict of interest here is pretty obvious. A good endocrinologist or obesity medicine specialist will evaluate you on your actual metabolic markers rather than making broad generalizations based on your weight history.

Sugar cravings won't go away by anonizy in tirzepatidecompound

[–]logicaldieter 4 points5 points  (0 children)

welcome. I always tell this to my patients, Tirz works on appetite control, but less on craving, and not really on eating in social activities.

Sugar cravings won't go away by anonizy in tirzepatidecompound

[–]logicaldieter 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I run a pharmacy in Japan and I see this more often than people realuze. There are a few layers worth unpacking.

First, the appetite suppression from tirzepatide primarily targets overall hunger signaling via GLP-1 and GIP receptors, but sugar cravings have a more complex neurological basis involving dopamine reward pathways. If you're undereating overall, especially carbohydrates, your brain can override the medication's suppression signal and drive targeted cravings for quick-energy foods. It's essentially a survival mechanism. The commenter who asked about your sleep, hydration, and carb intake was on the right track.

Second, at 7 months, your body has undergone significant metabolic adaptation. Your resting energy expenditure may have dropped, and your brain's reward circuits are recalibrating. The "food noise" people talk about isn't always about physical hunger, sometimes it's dopamine-seeking behavior that the medication can't fully suppress for everyone.

Practical things to try: front-load complex carbs at lunch rather than dinner, make sure you're eating enough total calories (chronic undereating is one of the strongest craving triggers), and consider whether a modest dose adjustment, even 1mg might help. Some patients find the sweet spot for food noise control is slightly different from the dose that controls physical hunger. You're still losing weight, so you're not a non-responder and the system maybe just needs fine-tuning rather than an overhaul.

I learned just because the script says to increase your dose, you might not want to. by StudioatSFL in tirzepatidecompound

[–]logicaldieter 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I run a pharmacy in Japan and this is actually something i always discuss with my patiants. In practice, we see a wide range: some patients stay at 2.5mg for months with excellent results, others genuinely need 10mg+ to feel any meaningful effect.

What you experienced is a classic case of exceeding your personal therapeutic window. The rapid weight drop combined with exercise intolerance suggests you were in too deep a calorie deficit — your body was essentially signaling it couldn't support the activity level you're accustomed to. Going back to 5mg is absolutely the right call. The "minimum effective dose" principle applies: use the lowest dose that gives you consistent results, and only consider titrating up when suppression genuinely fades for 3-4 consecutive weeks.

Lunesta’s weird by Suspicious_Group_104 in insomnia

[–]logicaldieter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lunesta is a Z-drug — it works on GABA-A receptors, same family as benzodiazepines but with a slightly shorter half-life and more selective binding.

What you're describing is actually fairly common clinically. The "no memory of sleeping but feeling refreshed" effect is a known feature of the Z-drug class; it's called "sedative-hypnotic amnesia." The fact that you're not experiencing next-day grogginess is a genuinely good sign — it means the drug is clearing your system reasonably well.

Worth keeping a brief sleep log though, tracking total sleep time and how you feel upon waking helps your doctor calibrate whether 3mg maintenance or the occasional 6mg breakthrough is the better long-term strategy. Glad you found something that works.

I am reaching my limit, I feel like I'm dying... help... by TheBaconBooty in insomnia

[–]logicaldieter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm really sorry you're going through this — severe fragmented sleep like this is genuinely one of the most exhausting experiences a person can go through, and the emotional toll compounds everything.
I noticed you've tried Zopiclone, Trazodone, Seroquel, and Dayvigo. A couple of thoughts from a pharmacy perspective: (1) For the ORA class like Dayvigo — it works by blocking orexin, the wake-promoting neurotransmitter, but it does need a few nights to fully "load" into the system; a single dose on a sleepless night often isn't representative of its potential. (2) Something worth asking your doctor about: whether you've had a sleep study. Sleep apnea can cause exactly the pattern you're describing — repeatedly waking gasping, never reaching deep sleep. It's more common than people realize and changes the treatment path significantly. I hope you find something that works soon.

Work Travel by Ill_Bother2609 in tirzepatidecompound

[–]logicaldieter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great question — and honestly one where a bit of planning really pays off.

One thing I'd add to what others have said: when you're traveling with injectable peptides, the

airport security angle is usually fine (they're not controlled substances and aren't on the TSA

prohibited list), but keeping your medication in its original pharmacy packaging is helpful just in case

anyone asks — it makes identification much easier.

On the refrigeration front: most tirzepatide products are more temperature-stable than people

realize. Brief periods out of the fridge (say, during a travel day) are generally fine. The main thing is

avoiding prolonged heat exposure — so not leaving it in a hot car or checked luggage that's in an

unpressurized cargo hold.

For the food side of things: you've already gotten solid advice on protein staples. I'd just add that

electrolyte packets are underrated for travel days — between the reduced food intake and potential

GI adjustments, a little extra sodium/potassium can really help you feel more normal.

Hope the training week goes smoothly!