The video provides a necessary, evidence-based correction to the binary misconception of dosing by clarifying the nuanced dose-response curve of glucagon activation. It successfully bridges the gap between clinical pharmacology and practical metabolic optimization through a sophisticated understanding of receptor saturation.
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Retatrutide Under 4mg: Are You Still Getting Glucagon Benefits?インデックス作成:
You don't need 4mg/week of Retatrutide to activate the glucagon receptor — here's what the research actually shows. Most people misunderstand the 4mg threshold for Reta's glucagon agonist effect. The liver is still active at lower doses — it's not an on/off switch. **Key Takeaways:** - 📊 4mg/week is where **liver lipolysis peaks** — not where it begins - 🔬 Researchers measured liver activity at 1mg, 2mg, 3mg, 4mg, and beyond to map the dose-response curve - 📉 Above 4mg shows **diminishing returns** — more isn't always better - ✅ At 1–2mg/week, the glucagon receptor **is still being activated** — just not maximally - 🎯 4mg is the optimization target, not the minimum effective dose --- Join my free community: For men: https://www.skool.com/ironforge For women: https://www.skool.com/powerhouse-peptides-for-women TRT/HRT Quiz: Men: https://apexmedicalgroup.us/testosterone-quiz/ Women: https://apexmedicalgroup.us/hrt-quiz/ #retatrutide #peptides #hormoneoptimization #retatrutidedosing #glucagon #fatlosss #peptideeducation #weightloss ---
still benefit from Retatide at under 4 mg per week, and a lot of people do. So, there's a common misconception that in order for you to get the maximum benefit from Retatide as far as a glucagon agonist aspect of it is concerned, you have to be at at least 4 mg. That is wildly inaccurate. So, basically what they did is they measured the activity in the liver based upon different dosing intervals. How active is the liver at 1 mg per week? How active is the liver at 2 mg, 3 mg, 4 mg, so forth and so on.
And then they even went beyond 4 mg. So, 6, 8, 12, etc. Based upon that liver activity, what they found was that at the 4 mg per week dosage is when the liver was most active. The lipolysis that was occurring in the liver was most active. After 4 mg, basically increasing the dose, there was diminishing returns.
But, that doesn't necessarily mean that the liver wasn't active at the lower dosing intervals. It just meant it was more active at 4. That doesn't necessarily mean there's like a switch that happens on the glucagon receptor at 4 mg. It's still working, it's just not working as much, which can make sense because you're doing a lower dose. So, if you want to optimize to get the most out of the glucagon agonist aspect of Retatide, yes, 4 mg per week is the target. However, that doesn't mean you're not getting the benefit from it at 2 mg per week or even 1 mg per week.
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