Reference

Glossary

A plain-English translation of the jargon that comes up around GLP-1s, peptides, and clinical trials. Hover any underlined term inside an article to see the short version; come here for the full list.

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503ARegulation
Two FDA categories of compounding pharmacy. 503A pharmacies compound for individual prescriptions. 503B 'outsourcing facilities' operate under stricter, manufacturer-like oversight.

A

A1cLab values
A blood test that reflects your average blood sugar over the past ~3 months. The standard yardstick for diabetes control.
agonistPharmacology basics
A drug that turns a receptor ON, mimicking the body's natural signal. A 'GLP-1 agonist' activates the GLP-1 receptor the same way the GLP-1 hormone would.

B

bacteriostatic waterDosing
Sterile water with a tiny amount of benzyl alcohol added to slow bacterial growth, used to reconstitute multi-dose peptide vials.
BMILab values
Body Mass Index — weight divided by height squared. A crude population-level screen for obesity; not a great measure of any individual's body composition.
body compositionPhysiology
What your weight is made of — fat mass vs lean mass (muscle, bone, organs). Two people at the same weight can have very different body composition.

C

caloric deficitPhysiology
Eating fewer calories than you burn. Required for weight loss, but a deficit that's too aggressive on GLP-1s drives loss of muscle, not just fat.
cardiovascular eventConditions
A serious heart or vascular incident — heart attack, stroke, or cardiovascular death. Some GLP-1 drugs are approved specifically to lower the risk of these events.
compoundedRegulation
A medication custom-mixed by a licensed pharmacy rather than mass-produced by the brand-name maker. Quality and oversight vary a lot from one pharmacy to another.
Read full entry →
contraindicationRegulation
A specific reason NOT to use a drug — a condition or other medication that makes it unsafe. GLP-1s are contraindicated in certain thyroid cancer histories, for example.

D

double-blindClinical trials
A study design where neither the participants nor the researchers know who is getting the real drug versus the placebo, which reduces bias.
dual agonistPharmacology basics
A drug that activates two receptors at once. Tirzepatide is a GLP-1/GIP dual agonist.

E

early satietySide effects
Feeling full after only a few bites. A common, usually-mild GLP-1 side effect driven by slowed gastric emptying.
energy expenditurePhysiology
How many calories your body burns over a given period. Glucagon-receptor activity (e.g. in retatrutide) is thought to nudge this upward.

F

FDA shortage listRegulation
An official FDA list of drugs in short supply. While a drug is listed, compounding pharmacies are temporarily allowed to prepare 'essentially copies' of it under specific conditions.
FDA-approvedRegulation
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has reviewed trial data and cleared a specific molecule, dose, and formulation for a specific use. Approval attaches to the use, not the molecule in the abstract.
food noisePhysiology
Intrusive thoughts about food — cravings, planning meals, fixating on snacks. Many people report GLP-1 drugs quiet this background chatter; its return often precedes weight regain.

G

gastric emptyingPhysiology
How quickly the stomach moves food into the small intestine. GLP-1 drugs slow this down, which prolongs fullness but also causes nausea and reflux.
GIPHormones & receptors
Another gut hormone released after eating. It works alongside GLP-1 to help control blood sugar and may influence how the body handles fat.
GLP-1Hormones & receptors
A gut hormone your body releases after eating that nudges insulin up, slows stomach emptying, and tells your brain you're full. GLP-1 drugs mimic this hormone.
Read full entry →
glucagonHormones & receptors
A hormone that raises blood sugar — insulin's counterpart. In drugs like retatrutide, activating the glucagon receptor is thought to increase energy expenditure.
glycemic controlPhysiology
How steadily blood sugar stays in a healthy range. The main goal of type 2 diabetes treatment, tracked with A1c and glucose readings.

H

half-lifePharmacology basics
How long it takes the body to clear half of a drug. A long half-life is why weekly GLP-1 injections work — the drug is still active days after the shot.

I

indicationRegulation
The specific condition the FDA has approved a drug to treat. The same molecule can be approved for one indication and used off-label for another.
insulinHormones & receptors
The hormone the pancreas releases to move sugar from the blood into cells. GLP-1 drugs nudge the pancreas to release insulin only when blood sugar is high.
intramuscularDosing
An injection into a muscle (e.g. deltoid, glute), deeper than subcutaneous. Most GLP-1 drugs are NOT given this way.
investigationalRegulation
A drug still being studied in trials and not yet approved by regulators. It can't legally be prescribed outside a trial setting.

L

lean massPhysiology
Everything in your body that isn't fat — mostly muscle. Aggressive caloric deficits on GLP-1s can cost lean mass alongside fat, which hurts long-term maintenance.
lipolysisPhysiology
The process of breaking down stored fat into fatty acids the body can burn for energy.

M

maintenance doseDosing
The steady long-term dose a person stays on after titration, once tolerability and response have stabilized.
metabolismPhysiology
The chemical reactions that turn food into energy. Despite the marketing, GLP-1s don't 'boost' metabolism — they reduce intake via appetite and gut signaling.

O

obesityConditions
A clinical category typically defined as BMI ≥ 30. The FDA label for Wegovy and Zepbound uses BMI thresholds plus weight-related conditions to define eligibility.
off-labelRegulation
When a doctor legally prescribes an FDA-approved drug for a use the FDA hasn't formally approved. Common and often evidence-based, but not the same as 'unapproved.'

P

pancreasPhysiology
The organ behind your stomach that makes insulin, glucagon, and digestive enzymes. It's a key target of GLP-1 signaling.
pancreatitisSide effects
Inflammation of the pancreas. A rare but serious GLP-1 side effect — classic sign is severe abdominal pain that radiates to the back, sometimes with vomiting or fever.
peptidePharmacology basics
A short chain of amino acids — basically a mini-protein. Many hormones (insulin, GLP-1) are peptides, which is why peptide drugs usually have to be injected rather than swallowed.
Read full entry →
peptide bondPharmacology basics
The chemical link that joins one amino acid to the next, forming a peptide chain.
Phase 2Clinical trials
The middle stage of drug testing in humans — typically a few hundred patients, designed to find an effective dose and gather early efficacy data.
Phase 3Clinical trials
The large, late-stage trials (thousands of patients) used to confirm efficacy and safety before FDA approval. The last hurdle before a drug can be marketed.
placeboClinical trials
A fake treatment (saline injection, sugar pill) given to a control group so researchers can tell whether the real drug's effects are bigger than expectation alone.
prior authorizationRegulation
An insurance hurdle where your provider has to justify a prescription before the plan agrees to pay. Common for GLP-1s, especially for weight-loss indications.

R

receptorPharmacology basics
A protein on or inside cells that acts like a lock. When the right key (a hormone or drug) fits in, the cell does something — release insulin, feel full, etc.
reconstitutionDosing
Mixing a powdered drug with sterile liquid (usually bacteriostatic water) to make it injectable. Common with compounded peptides sold as vials of powder.
refluxSide effects
Stomach contents (and acid) backing up into the esophagus. More common on GLP-1s because the stomach empties more slowly.
research peptideRegulation
A compound sold for laboratory use only — not for humans. It is not FDA-regulated, not tested for human-grade purity, and not a legal shortcut to a prescription drug.
resistance trainingPhysiology
Exercise against load (weights, bands, bodyweight) that signals muscle to be preserved or built. The main non-pharmacologic lever to protect lean mass during GLP-1 weight loss.
retatrutideDrugs
An experimental injectable from Eli Lilly that activates three hormone receptors at once (GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon). Not yet FDA-approved.

S

semaglutideDrugs
A GLP-1 agonist sold as Ozempic (diabetes), Wegovy (weight loss), and Rybelsus (oral form for diabetes).
starter doseDosing
The low first dose used to let the body adjust to a drug. Not intended to drive results — just to limit side effects before escalation.
subcutaneousDosing
An injection into the fatty layer just under the skin (belly, thigh, upper arm) — not into a muscle or vein. This is how GLP-1 drugs are given.

T

tirzepatideDrugs
A weekly injection that activates both GLP-1 and GIP receptors. Sold as Mounjaro (type 2 diabetes) and Zepbound (weight loss).
titrationDosing
Gradually stepping the dose up (or down) over weeks so the body has time to adjust. Most GLP-1 drugs use titration to limit nausea.
trial armClinical trials
One group of participants in a clinical trial. A trial usually has several arms — for example, a placebo arm and one or more dose arms — so researchers can compare outcomes.
triple agonistPharmacology basics
A drug that activates three receptors at once. Retatrutide hits GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon together.
type 2 diabetesConditions
A chronic condition where the body doesn't respond well to insulin and blood sugar runs high. GLP-1 drugs were originally developed to treat it.