Patient Resources
How GLP-1 medications work
GLP-1s are not magic. They are a hormone your body already makes, used to slow eating and signal fullness. Here is what the medication actually does.
What GLP-1 is
GLP-1 stands for glucagon-like peptide-1. It is a hormone your gut produces every time you eat. The hormone tells your pancreas to release insulin, tells your stomach to empty more slowly, and tells your brain you are full.
GLP-1 medications are versions of that same hormone, longer-lasting than the one your body makes on its own. The most familiar names are semaglutide and tirzepatide. Both work on the GLP-1 system, with tirzepatide also activating a second hormone called GIP.
What it does in practice
Three things, in this order, are what most people notice:
- Less appetite. Food becomes less interesting. The constant background hum of "what's for dinner" quiets down.
- Smaller meals feel filling. Stomach emptying is slower, so a normal-sized plate carries you longer.
- Fewer cravings. Specifically, fewer cravings for ultra-processed foods. The reward signal for those foods weakens.
The combined effect is that most people on a GLP-1 protocol naturally eat in a moderate caloric deficit without consciously trying to. Over weeks and months, that produces weight loss.
What it does not do
GLP-1 medications do not melt fat. They do not change your metabolism in any other way. They do not work without effort.
Patients who lose weight on a GLP-1 and keep it off long-term universally pair the medication with three things: enough protein to protect muscle, strength training, and habits they can maintain after the medication is gone.
How dosing works
Most protocols start low and titrate up over weeks. Low starting doses minimize the most common side effect, which is nausea. The dose increases as your body adapts. Most patients land at a sustained dose somewhere below the maximum.
A licensed clinician will calibrate dosing based on your weight, your goals, and how you respond. Compounded GLP-1s allow for dose precision that brand-name versions do not.
The bottom line
GLP-1 medications are a powerful, evidence-supported tool. They are not a substitute for nutrition and movement. Used together, the combination is meaningfully more effective than either alone.
Disclaimer
General educational reference. Not medical advice.
The information on this page is published for general educational purposes. It is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always follow the specific instructions provided by your prescribing clinician, and consult them before changing how you take any compounded medication.
Crystal Clear RX Wellness is not a pharmacy. Compounded medications are prepared by a licensed 503A compounding pharmacy partner pursuant to a valid prescription written by a licensed clinician for an individually identified patient. A licensed prescriber must evaluate your eligibility before any compounded medication is dispensed. The therapies referenced on this page are not FDA-approved drugs; they are compounded formulations prepared at the discretion of the prescribing clinician under section 503A of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.
References to USP guidance, beyond-use dating, or technique norms reflect generally accepted practice for at-home subcutaneous self-administration. They do not override prescriber-specific instructions, product labeling, or the policies of your dispensing pharmacy.
For full regulatory information, see the 503A disclosure.
