Use a sharps container (about ₹150 at a pharmacy) or a sturdy capped bottle, never recap needles, and hand the full container to a hospital or large pharmacy.
Worth knowing
Technique and timing are easy once you've done it once. When in doubt, message your doctor rather than guessing.
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.
What the medication is doing inside your body
Three things happen at once on {b}. First, your stomach empties more slowly, so a small meal keeps you full for hours. Second, appetite signalling in the brain is dialled down, so you think about food less. Third, blood-sugar control improves because insulin is released more efficiently after meals. Together these put you in a gentle, sustainable calorie deficit — the reason people lose roughly 10–20% of their body weight over a year when the medicine is paired with enough protein and some strength training.
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.
Why strength training matters more than cardio here
Cardio burns calories, but on a GLP-1 the appetite reduction already creates your deficit — so the job of exercise shifts to protecting muscle and shaping the result. Prioritise two to three resistance sessions a week; add walking for daily activity and blood-sugar control. Keeping muscle keeps your metabolism up, improves how your body looks as the weight comes off, and reduces loose skin. Pair this with your protein target and the loss skews heavily toward fat.
Side effects and how to manage them
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Nausea is the most common, mostly in week one and after each dose increase. Smaller portions, less oily food, ginger or jeera water, and staying upright after eating all help.
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Constipation responds to three litres of water a day, daily isabgol (psyllium husk), fruit and sprouts, and a short walk after meals.
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Fatigue usually means you're eating too little — check your protein, iron and B12, and don't cut calories too hard.
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Reflux eases with lighter, earlier dinners and not lying down after eating; a short course of antacids or a PPI helps if needed.
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Most side effects are temporary and fade as your body adjusts. Anything severe or persistent — especially intense upper-abdominal pain — should go straight to your doctor.
Who's a good candidate — and who isn't
GLP-1 weight treatment is generally for adults with a BMI of 30 or above, or 27 and above with a weight-related condition such as type 2 diabetes, PCOS, fatty liver, high blood pressure or sleep apnoea. It isn't suitable for everyone: it's avoided in pregnancy and breastfeeding, and ruled out entirely for people with a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer or MEN-2 syndrome. A past episode of pancreatitis or a history of eating disorders calls for extra caution. This is exactly why a proper medical assessment comes first — a doctor will tell you honestly whether it's right for you, including when the answer is no.
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.
Talk to a doctor before you start
Everyone's history is different. A ZIVOLABS doctor reviews your medical history, current medicines and goals before prescribing — and stays with you through every dose change. Take the 2-minute eligibility check to see if a GLP-1 plan is right for you.
