Medications

Semaglutide

The most widely used GLP-1 medication for weight loss and type 2 diabetes. Here's how it works, what to expect, and what you need to know before starting.

Very strong evidence 0.25–2.4 mg/week Weight & blood sugar 5 min read

Semaglutide is an injectable medication that mimics a gut hormone called GLP-1. It helps you feel full sooner, lowers your blood sugar, and can lead to significant weight loss — typically 15–17% of body weight in clinical trials.

Type
GLP-1 receptor agonist
How it's taken
Weekly injection (pen)
Timeline
4–8 weeks appetite, 3–6 months full effect
Prescription required?
Yes, always

Good for you if: You have type 2 diabetes, a BMI over 30 (or 27+ with related health issues), and your doctor recommends medical weight management alongside diet and exercise.

Dive deeper into the research

Common side effects

  • Nausea in 40–50% of users, especially during dose ramp-up
  • 25–40% of weight lost may be muscle — resistance training is essential
  • Rare but serious: pancreatitis risk (seek emergency care for severe abdominal pain)
See all side effects

What does semaglutide do?

Your gut naturally releases a hormone called GLP-1 after you eat. It tells your brain you're full and signals your pancreas to release insulin. Semaglutide is a synthetic version of this hormone that lasts much longer — about a week — so you only need one injection.

The result: you feel less hungry, eat less naturally, and your blood sugar stays more stable. In clinical trials (the STEP programme), people lost an average of 15–17% of their body weight over about 16 months. That's roughly 15–20 kg for someone weighing 100 kg.

What can you expect?

Who is it for?

Semaglutide is prescribed for two main reasons:

It's not for type 1 diabetes, and it's not a shortcut — you still need to eat well and stay active. The medication works best alongside lifestyle changes, not instead of them.

How it's taken

Typical dosing schedule

Start at 0.25 mg/week for 4 weeks, then increase gradually. Your doctor will titrate up based on how you respond and tolerate each dose. The target is usually 1–2 mg for diabetes or 2.4 mg for weight loss.

Inject once weekly in your stomach, thigh, or upper arm. Same day each week, any time of day. Rotate injection sites.

Important: Never rush the dose increase. If nausea is significant at any dose, stay at that level for an extra 4 weeks before moving up. There's no fixed schedule — titrate at your tolerance.

Storage: Unused pens must stay refrigerated (2–8°C). Once opened, a pen can be kept at room temperature (below 30°C) for up to 56 days. In Indian summers, always transport in an insulated bag with an ice pack.

Availability in India

Semaglutide is available in India under several brand names:

Monthly cost ranges from ₹4,000–₹12,000+ depending on dose and brand. No generics are available in India yet. You'll need a prescription from an endocrinologist or obesity medicine specialist.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much weight can you lose on semaglutide?

In the STEP 1 trial, people on the highest dose (2.4 mg/week) lost an average of 15–17% of their body weight over 68 weeks. That's roughly 15–20 kg for someone who weighs 100 kg. Results vary — some people lose more, some less. Diet, exercise, and starting weight all matter.

Is semaglutide available in India?

Yes. Semaglutide is available in India as Ozempic (injection for diabetes), Rybelsus (oral tablets for diabetes), and through some specialty clinics for weight management. Cost ranges from ₹4,000–₹12,000+ per month depending on dose and brand.

What happens when you stop semaglutide?

Most people regain a significant portion of weight within 12 months of stopping — studies show about two-thirds of lost weight returns. This is because the appetite-suppressing effect stops when the drug stops. Building sustainable diet and exercise habits while on the medication is essential.

Does semaglutide cause muscle loss?

Yes. About 25–40% of weight lost on semaglutide is lean mass (muscle and bone), not fat. This is similar to any caloric restriction without exercise. Resistance training 2–3 times per week and protein intake of 1.2–1.6 g/kg/day are essential to minimise this.

Research & Science

How it works in your body

Semaglutide binds to GLP-1 receptors throughout your body. In your brain, it acts on the hypothalamus to reduce hunger signals and food reward. In your pancreas, it stimulates insulin release and suppresses glucagon (the hormone that raises blood sugar). In your gut, it slows gastric emptying — food stays in your stomach longer, which is why you feel full sooner.

It also appears to reduce systemic inflammation, improve lipid profiles, and may have cardiovascular protective effects — the SELECT trial showed a 20% reduction in major cardiovascular events in people with obesity.

Clinical trial data

Titration schedule

WeekDosePurpose
1–40.25 mgLet your body adjust
5–80.5 mgTherapeutic effect begins
9–121.0 mgStandard diabetes dose
13–161.7 mgHigher weight-loss dose
17+2.4 mgMaximum weight-management dose

If you experience significant nausea at any step, stay at that dose for an extra 4 weeks. There is no rush — slower titration means fewer side effects and better long-term adherence.

Biomarker monitoring

If you're on semaglutide, track these labs before starting and every 3–6 months:

Side effects & safety

Semaglutide has a well-documented side-effect profile. Most side effects are manageable, but some are serious. Here's the complete picture.

Common GI side effects

These are the most frequent adverse events and the leading cause of discontinuation. They result from delayed gastric emptying — a core mechanism of GLP-1 drugs.

Side EffectIncidenceTypical OnsetDuration
Nausea40–50%First 1–2 weeks at each dose stepUsually resolves within 4–8 weeks
Vomiting15–25%First 2–4 weeksImproves with dose stabilisation
Diarrhoea15–30%VariableOften self-limiting
Constipation10–20%Any phaseMay persist; responds to fibre & hydration
Abdominal pain10–15%VariableUsually mild

How to manage nausea: Slow titration is the single most important tool. Eat small, low-fat meals. Inject in the evening so you sleep through the worst of it. Ginger tea or ginger supplements can reduce nausea by 20–30%. Don't lie down for 2 hours after eating.

Muscle and lean-mass loss

This is the most clinically significant and least discussed side effect. Data from the STEP trials shows that 25–40% of total weight lost on semaglutide is lean mass — muscle, bone, and organ tissue — rather than fat alone.

Muscle preservation — non-negotiable

Resistance training 2–3×/week — provides the anabolic stimulus to preserve muscle even in a caloric deficit

Protein 1.2–1.6 g/kg/day — prioritise protein at every meal (eggs, paneer, dal, whey, tofu)

Creatine monohydrate 3–5 g/day — best-evidenced supplement for preserving lean mass during caloric restriction

Hair loss

Diffuse hair shedding (telogen effluvium) has been reported in 3–6% of users. It's triggered by rapid weight loss rather than a direct drug effect. Hair typically begins shedding 2–4 months after significant weight loss and regrows once weight stabilises. Ensure adequate protein, iron, zinc, and biotin intake.

Facial volume loss ("Ozempic face")

Rapid subcutaneous fat loss from the face can cause a gaunt, aged appearance — especially in people over 40 or those losing more than 10% body weight. Slower weight loss, adequate protein, and collagen-support nutrients (vitamin C, glycine) can help. This happens with any significant rapid weight loss, not just semaglutide.

Serious risks

Seek emergency care if you experience
  • Severe abdominal pain radiating to the back (possible pancreatitis)
  • Persistent vomiting — can't keep fluids down for 24+ hours
  • Signs of allergic reaction — facial swelling, hives, difficulty breathing
  • Lump or swelling in the neck with difficulty swallowing
  • Severe right upper-quadrant pain with fever (possible gallbladder)

Who should not take semaglutide

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