Caught early, prediabetes can often be reversed — and weight loss is the single most effective lever. GLP-1, alongside diet and movement, can pull blood sugar back into the normal range.
The detail
The aim is to act before full diabetes sets in. Lifestyle is always part of the plan; medication helps when lifestyle alone isn't enough.
When to check with your doctor
This is general information, not a prescription. Your dose, your other medicines and your medical history all change the picture — message your ZIVOLABS doctor before making any change to how you take your medication.
The science, in plain language
Think of {b} as topping up a hunger-control signal your body already makes but doesn't make enough of. By acting on appetite centres in the brain and slowing digestion, it shrinks portion sizes and cravings without you having to count every calorie. Because it nudges insulin only when blood sugar is high, it also steadies glucose — which is why this class of drug came from diabetes care before it was widely used for weight. It is not a stimulant and not a 'fat burner'; it changes appetite, and the weight loss follows from eating less.
Is it right for you?
The honest answer needs a doctor, but the broad rules are simple. You're likely a candidate if your BMI is 30+, or 27+ with a condition like diabetes, PCOS or fatty liver, and lifestyle changes alone haven't been enough. You're not a candidate if you're pregnant, breastfeeding, or planning pregnancy soon, or if you have a personal/family history of medullary thyroid cancer or MEN-2. Pancreatitis history and eating-disorder history need careful, individual judgement. A good prescriber assesses all of this before writing anything.
Your likely month-by-month journey
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Month 1 is about tolerance, not the scale — you titrate up slowly so your gut adapts and side effects stay mild.
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Month 2 is when most people notice clothes fitting looser and portions feeling smaller without effort.
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Month 3 is the first real checkpoint: if you've lost under 3% of your weight, your doctor reviews the dose or molecule.
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Months 4–6 deliver the bulk of the visible change, especially around the waist as visceral fat responds first.
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After 6 months, the focus moves from losing to maintaining — a lower steady dose plus the habits you've built.
Eating to get the most out of it
The single most important thing on a GLP-1 is protein. With appetite reduced, it's easy to eat too little, and without enough protein you lose muscle along with fat. Aim for roughly 1.2–1.6 g of protein per kg of body weight a day — front-loaded at breakfast — using dal, paneer, curd, eggs, soya, fish or a whey shake. Roti, dal, paneer and rajma make hitting your protein target easy here; the watch-outs are rich, ghee-laden gravies and stuffed parathas — choose one roti and lean on the paneer and dal. Keep refined carbs and fried food modest (they also tend to trigger nausea on a slowed stomach), drink water through the day, and let your fuller-faster stomach guide your portions.
The side effects nobody warns you about (and the fixes)
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Early nausea and a feeling of fullness after just a few bites are the medicine working — eat protein first so those bites count.
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Constipation and a little bloating are common while the gut slows down; fluids, fibre and a daily walk sort out most cases within a week.
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Some people notice taste changes, sulfur burps or mild headaches in the first weeks — these almost always settle on their own.
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Hair shedding a few months in comes from rapid weight loss, not the drug, and reverses with enough protein, iron and B12.
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Start low, go slow, and tell your doctor about anything severe — that single principle prevents the great majority of problems.
How to avoid fake or unsafe medication
If a deal looks too good to be true, it is. Real GLP-1 medicines are expensive because they're complex biologics with a cold chain; suspiciously cheap offers across India are almost always counterfeit. Insist on a licensed pharmacy, a real prescription, an intact hologram and batch number, and proper refrigerated delivery. Never buy 'research peptides' or compounded versions — they aren't approved in India and aren't quality-controlled. Doctor supervision matters here too: the right dose, titrated slowly, is what keeps the medicine both safe and effective.
Frequently asked questions
How long until I see results?
Appetite usually drops within the first week or two, with steady weight loss building over the first one to three months as the dose increases. Judge progress monthly, not daily.
Will I regain the weight if I stop?
Often, yes — appetite returns once the medicine clears, so a planned step-down to a maintenance dose plus the habits you've built is far better than stopping abruptly.
Do I need to follow a strict diet?
No strict diet, but protein matters: aim for 1.2–1.6 g per kg of body weight a day to protect muscle, and keep fried food and refined carbs modest to avoid nausea.
Is it safe to take long-term?
The evidence to date is reassuring across multi-year trials, including cardiovascular benefit. It's intended for long-term use under medical supervision.
Key takeaways
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A GLP-1 medicine reduces appetite and slows digestion, so you eat less without constant hunger.
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Protein (1.2–1.6 g/kg/day) plus two to three strength sessions a week protect muscle while you lose fat.
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Side effects are mostly early and manageable; start low, go slow, and report anything severe.
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Buy only genuine, doctor-prescribed medication from a licensed pharmacy — counterfeits are a real risk in India.
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It works best as a supervised plan, with a maintenance dose to hold the result rather than stopping abruptly.
Not sure if it's right for you?
If you're weighing up GLP-1 therapy, the safest first step is a proper medical assessment — not a grey-market pen from a stranger. ZIVOLABS doctors will tell you honestly whether you're a candidate. The assessment is free.
