How GLP-1 Actually Works
What your medication is doing in your body from day one.
GLP-1 medication works by mimicking a hormone your gut already produces - glucagon-like peptide-1 - that your body releases naturally after you eat.
When you inject it, several things happen at once. Your pancreas releases insulin in response to rising blood sugar. Your stomach empties more slowly, so food stays with you longer. And signals travel to the brain's appetite centres telling you that you are full. The result is that hunger feels quieter and smaller portions feel satisfying.
These effects do not switch on all at once. Your dose starts low and increases gradually over weeks - partly to give your body time to adjust, and partly because the therapeutic effect builds as the dose rises. What you feel in week one will be different from what you feel in week eight.
Quiz
Which of the following best describes how GLP-1 medication reduces hunger?
Quiz