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An appetite-suppressing prick once a week disproves the conventional belief: eat less, move more, in other words, abstinence and discipline. In fact, obesity is due to biology, not lack of willpower. Medical research into drugs to combat diabetes has achieved a fantastic side effect: Weight losses of 15 percent or more! Tiny amounts of imitations of so-called incretins act for 168 hours. The body's own incretins only manage this for two minutes. Hope, hype or humbug? Social media spurs discussion. Serious need for clarification. Yes, semaglutide and tirzepatide are the substances of the hour.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
An appetite-suppressing prick once a week disproves the conventional belief: eat less, move more, in other words, abstinence and discipline. In fact, obesity is due to biology, not lack of willpower. Medical research into drugs to combat diabetes has achieved a fantastic side effect: Weight losses of 15 percent or more! Tiny amounts of imitations of so-called incretins act for 168 hours. The body's own incretins only manage this for two minutes. Hope, hype or humbug? Social media spurs discussion. Serious need for clarification. Yes, semaglutide and tirzepatide are the substances of the hour. But some other diabetes pricks are counterproductive and increase weight.SÖDGMis r,u,tryt htstzk gxgkmz gkg x,gxölrrgäGNÄS

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Autorenporträt
Jan-Dirk Fauteck, M.D., preventive medicine physician and chronobiologist, received his Ph.D. from the University of Milan and has been researching the role of internal clocks in the human organism for the past two decades