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Retatrutide
Retatrutide
Mechanism · Dosing · Effects (10 mg protocol — fast titration to 4 mg)
Overview
Retatrutide (LY-3437943) is an investigational triple-agonist acting on GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon receptors to reduce appetite, enhance insulin sensitivity, slow gastric emptying, and increase energy expenditure. It is administered once weekly via subcutaneous injection. This guide provides a 10 mg vial–based dosing, reconstitution, .
Mechanism (how it works)
-
Triple receptor activation:
GLP-1 + GIP + glucagon → enhanced satiety, better glucose regulation, increased fat oxidation. -
Appetite & metabolism synergy:
Appetite suppression begins at low doses; metabolic benefits develop progressively with consistent weekly dosing.
Dosing & Reconstitution Guide (practical)
Route: Subcutaneous injection, once weekly
Storage: Keep reconstituted solution refrigerated (2–8 °C), protected from light
Goal: Reach 4 mg/week using a faster, clinically aligned escalation
Reconstitution
10 mg vial + 1.0 mL bacteriostatic water → 10 mg/mL
-
1 mg = 0.1 mL = 10 units (U-100 insulin syringe)
-
0.5 mg = 0.05 mL = 5 units
Fast-Titration Protocol (ends at 4 mg)
Weeks 1–2:
1 mg weekly
→ 0.1 mL (10 units)
Weeks 3–4:
2 mg weekly
→ 0.2 mL (20 units)
Weeks 5–6:
3 mg weekly
→ 0.3 mL (30 units)
Weeks 7–16:
4 mg weekly (maintenance dose)
→ 0.4 mL (40 units)
This provides a controlled but faster escalation, reaching the target therapeutic dose by Week 7.
Effects & Benefits
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Weight reduction:
Dose-dependent, with stronger results once reaching 3–4 mg. -
Metabolic improvements:
Better blood sugar control, improved insulin sensitivity, lower fasting glucose. -
Reduced appetite:
Strong satiety, slower gastric emptying, lower food intake.
Side Effects & Safety Notes
-
Common:
Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal discomfort — typically during dose increases. -
Titration-dependent:
Faster escalation may increase GI symptoms; reduce dose or repeat previous week if poorly tolerated. -
Safety notice:
Retatrutide is investigational. Do not use outside medical supervision. Stop and seek medical care for severe or unusual reactions.
