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Originally posted by @dr.karanr on TikTok · 78s|Watch on TikTok
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Auto-generated transcript of @dr.karanr's video. Quoted here for educational fact-check commentary; original creator retains all rights to the video content.

  1. 0:00Whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa, baby
  2. 0:04We know
  3. 0:07You didn't
  4. 0:10If you're thinking about taking a zem pick for short-term weight loss as a surgeon who's been involved with weight loss surgeries
  5. 0:16Let me tell you the truth research shows that most people who stop a zem pick will regain most of the original weight
  6. 0:22This study of almost 2000 adults show that patients who stopped a zem pick
  7. 0:25Regained 2 thirds of the lost weight within a year
  8. 0:27The question then becomes do you actually need to chase weight loss at all costs or other costs of taking
  9. 0:32medications for life. And the answer to that might be yes if the alternative is life threatening
  10. 0:37chronic metabolic diseases. For the select group of patients who would actually benefit from a
  11. 0:41zempick it's got a far lower risk profile than major weight loss surgery which literally involves
  12. 0:45rearranging your gut. And it can still offer similar weight loss benefits and be far less invasive.
  13. 0:50So in specific cases, zempick can be a game changer for the treatment of obesity. But for
  14. 0:54someone who is slightly overweight or a normal weight and taking a zempick to shed a few kilos
  15. 0:58or get that summer six pack the risk benefit ratio of a zempick does not land favorably.
  16. 1:03In the pursuit of a six pack are you willing to risk a side effect like pancreatitis and inflammation
  17. 1:07of the pancreas which can be lethal. Ultimately as the data shows a zempick alone is not sufficient
  18. 1:12for sustainable long-term weight loss. It has to be combined with lifestyle changes including
  19. 1:16dietary habits and exercise.

@dr.karanr's Ozempic claims need some fact-checking

Dr Karan Rajan

TikTok creator

25.7M viewsWatch on TikTok

Quick answer

Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) is FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes management and chronic weight management in adults with a BMI of 30 or higher, or 27 or higher with at least one weight-related comorbidity. The withdrawal data from the STEP 1 extension study confirms that discontinuing the drug without concurrent behavioral and dietary support leads to substantial weight regain within 12 to 18 months. Long-term use is increasingly considered for appropriate patients, but prescribing decisions should account for individual cardiovascular risk, metabolic status, and patient-specific goals.

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GLP-1 social video fact-checksCompounded SemaglutideProvider discussion

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Regulatory reality

Compounded Semaglutide access requires the right clinical path

Safety screen

Viral claims can miss contraindications, dose escalation, medication interactions, and quality-control risks.

This page currently connects to 8 source-backed evidence items through visible references or structured citation data.

PubMed evidence trail

Research sources used to frame this page

For @dr.karanr's Ozempic claims need some fact-checking, FormBlends checks the page topic against primary trials, systematic reviews, guidelines, and current PubMed-indexed literature where available. These citations are context, not medical advice, proof of eligibility, or a claim that every study applies to every patient.

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Direct answer

Compounded Semaglutide should be treated as a claim to verify, then compared with evidence, safety context, and a provider review path.

Evidence check

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A viral claim can miss patient-specific risks, medication interactions, legal access, and source quality.

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If the claim matches your goal, use the get-started flow to move from curiosity into a supervised prescription review.

Claim path

Keep researching this semaglutide video claims cluster

Best for searchers comparing social semaglutide claims with GLP-1 eligibility, outcomes, and safety context.

Page-specific review note

What this exact clip is really saying

This FormBlends review is specific to "@dr.karanr's Ozempic claims need some fact-checking" from Dr Karan Rajan. We read the clip as a GLP-1 social video fact-checks claim about Compounded Semaglutide, then separate the useful signal from what a short social video cannot prove. The page-specific claim focus is: Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) is FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes management and chronic weight management in adults with a BMI of 30 or higher, or 27 or higher with at least one weight-related comorbidity.

The reason this review is not generic is the source wording and the canonical claim label "glp1 ozempic." In this clip, the useful excerpt is: "Whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa, baby We know You didn't If you're thinking about taking a zem pick for short-term weight loss as a surgeon who's been involved with weight loss surgeries Let me tell you the truth..." That wording changes the review because it points to Compounded Semaglutide safety, access, evidence, and fit, not a one-size-fits-all protocol.

The source trail for this page is checked against Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity (2021), Effect of Continued Weekly Subcutaneous Semaglutide vs Placebo on Weight Loss Maintenance (2021), and Effect of Weekly Subcutaneous Semaglutide vs Daily Liraglutide on Body Weight (2022), plus the creator's own wording. Compounded Semaglutide still needs an eligibility review, medication-interaction screen, access check, and quality-control review before anyone treats a social clip as medical advice.

Semaglutide is FDA-approved for BMI 30 or higher, or BMI 27 or higher with a weight-related comorbidity.
People who land here are usually trying to understand whether the Compounded Semaglutide claim is evidence-backed, safe, and relevant to their own situation.
The strongest next step is to compare the claim with FormBlends' Compounded Semaglutide guide, evidence notes, and provider review path before acting.

Claim verdict

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This page is built to answer the specific claim behind the clip, then separate what is useful from what still needs clinical context. That makes the URL more than a repost: it gives Google, readers, and AI retrieval systems a concise verdict with source and safety boundaries.

Claim being checked

Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) is FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes management and chronic weight management in adults with a BMI of 30 or higher, or 27 or higher with at least one weight-related comorbidity.

FormBlends verdict

Compounded Semaglutide safety, access, evidence, and fit

Evidence strength

Source-backed review with clinical or regulatory citations.

Patient-safe next step

Compare the claim with the Compounded Semaglutide guide, safety notes, access rules, and a licensed-provider review.

What to do with this video

Use the clip as a claim to verify, not a treatment plan

What it helps with

  • Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) is FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes management and chronic weight management in adults with a BMI of 30 or higher, or 27 or higher with at least one weight-related comorbidity. The withdrawal data from the STEP 1 extension study confirms that discontinuing the drug without concurrent behavioral and dietary support leads to substantial weight regain within 12 to 18 months. Long-term use is increasingly considered for appropriate patients, but prescribing decisions should account for individual cardiovascular risk, metabolic status, and patient-specific goals.
  • The STEP 1 withdrawal study (Wilding et al., 2022) showed participants regained roughly two thirds of lost weight within 68 weeks of stopping semaglutide, confirming this is a long-term treatment, not a short course.
  • Semaglutide is FDA-approved for BMI 30 or higher, or BMI 27 or higher with a weight-related comorbidity. Use in metabolically healthy, normal-weight individuals is off-label and not supported by current evidence.

What it may miss

  • It may not cover eligibility, contraindications, medication interactions, lab history, or dose escalation.
  • Compounded Semaglutide decisions still need source quality, legal access, and provider oversight checks.
  • Social video captions rarely show the full evidence base behind a claim.

Best next step

Compare the claim against the Compounded Semaglutide guide, cost path, safety notes, and provider review before acting.

Review Compounded Semaglutide

What You'll Learn

  • The STEP 1 withdrawal study (Wilding et al., 2022) showed participants regained roughly two thirds of lost weight within 68 weeks of stopping semaglutide, confirming this is a long-term treatment, not a short course.
  • Semaglutide is FDA-approved for BMI 30 or higher, or BMI 27 or higher with a weight-related comorbidity. Use in metabolically healthy, normal-weight individuals is off-label and not supported by current evidence.
  • GLP-1 receptor agonists carry a class warning for acute pancreatitis. The absolute risk is low but real, and it is a clinically relevant risk to weigh against benefit for otherwise healthy patients.
  • Bariatric surgery (Schauer et al., 2017, NEJM) still produces greater total weight loss than GLP-1 drugs in severe obesity cases. The two treatments are not directly interchangeable, despite semaglutide being far less invasive.
  • The STEP trials consistently showed that combining semaglutide with dietary and behavioral intervention produced better outcomes than medication alone, making lifestyle modification a clinical requirement, not an optional add-on.
  • Weight regain after stopping semaglutide reflects the underlying biology of obesity as a chronic condition, not treatment failure. This is the central argument for long-term or indefinite use in appropriate patients.
  • There is no current evidence supporting semaglutide use for cosmetic body composition goals in people without a qualifying metabolic condition, and its side effect profile does not justify that use case.

Our take · Written by FormBlends editorial team · Reviewed by FormBlends Medical Team · This is not a transcript. It is our independent review of the video above.

What did @dr.karanr actually say?

The surgeon's core argument is that semaglutide is not a short-term fix. He cites a real study showing patients "regained two thirds of the lost weight within a year" of stopping the drug, and argues that for people with serious metabolic disease, the risk-benefit calculation may justify long-term use. For someone chasing a "summer six pack," he says it does not. He also insists lifestyle changes are non-negotiable alongside the medication.

The framing is more nuanced than most TikTok takes on this topic. He is not selling the drug, and he is not dismissing it. He is trying to draw a line between medically appropriate use and cosmetic misuse, which is a legitimate and important distinction that gets lost in a lot of the online conversation around GLP-1 drugs.

Does the science back this up?

Largely, yes. The study he references is real and the numbers are accurate. Wilding et al. (2022, Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism) followed participants from the original STEP 1 trial after they stopped semaglutide. Within 68 weeks of stopping, participants regained approximately two thirds of the weight they had lost, and cardiometabolic improvements largely reversed. The sample was 327 adults, not quite "almost 2000" as stated, though the broader STEP 1 trial itself enrolled around 1,961 participants.

His point about pancreatitis is also grounded in real pharmacovigilance data. GLP-1 receptor agonists carry a class warning for pancreatitis. The absolute risk is low, but it is not zero, and it is a fair risk to flag for someone who is already metabolically healthy. The comparison to bariatric surgery is also defensible in the literature. Schauer et al. (2017, New England Journal of Medicine) found that for people with obesity and type 2 diabetes, metabolic surgery produced significant remission rates, but the invasiveness and complication profile is objectively higher than subcutaneous injection.

What did they get wrong (or right)?

The sample size slip is worth flagging. Citing "almost 2000 adults" for the regain data conflates the STEP 1 trial enrollment with the withdrawal sub-study, which had a much smaller follow-up cohort. It is not a fabrication, but it is imprecise enough to matter.

He also says semaglutide "can still offer similar weight loss benefits" to surgery. That needs a caveat. For people with severe obesity, bariatric surgery still outperforms GLP-1 agonists in total weight loss magnitude and in long-term durability without ongoing medication. The comparison is not apples to apples.

What he gets right is the clinical logic. The indication for semaglutide under current FDA approval is a BMI of 30 or higher, or 27 or higher with a weight-related comorbidity. Using it to lose a few kilograms for cosmetic reasons is genuinely off-label and exposes low-risk individuals to a side effect profile that is not justified by the benefit. His point about lifestyle modification being necessary is also well-supported. The STEP trials consistently showed that behavioral intervention alongside the drug produced better outcomes than either alone.

What should you actually know?

Semaglutide works while you take it. The regain data is not a reason to dismiss the drug. It is a reason to understand that stopping it without a transition plan is likely to result in weight returning. For people with type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or clinically defined obesity, that is a strong argument for long-term treatment, not a dealbreaker.

For people who are already at a healthy weight and want to use semaglutide for body composition, the calculus is different. The drug is not approved for that use, the side effect profile includes nausea, vomiting, and rare but serious events like pancreatitis and gastroparesis, and the weight will return when the drug stops. That is not a favorable trade for someone who does not have a metabolic condition driving the need.

The broader point, which this creator makes reasonably well, is that obesity is a chronic disease with biological drivers, not a willpower problem. GLP-1 drugs treat a real pathology. Using them recreationally is a different conversation entirely, and conflating the two does a disservice to patients who genuinely need the medication.

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About the Creator

Dr Karan Rajan · TikTok creator

25.7M views on this video

Ozempic

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers based on this video and our medical team review.

What does the video say about the step 1 withdrawal study (wilding et al., 2022) showed?

The STEP 1 withdrawal study (Wilding et al., 2022) showed participants regained roughly two thirds of lost weight within 68 weeks of stopping semaglutide, confirming this is a long-term treatment, not a short course.

What does the video say about semaglutide?

Semaglutide is FDA-approved for BMI 30 or higher, or BMI 27 or higher with a weight-related comorbidity. Use in metabolically healthy, normal-weight individuals is off-label and not supported by current evidence.

What does the video say about glp-1 receptor agonists carry a class warning for acute pancreatitis.?

GLP-1 receptor agonists carry a class warning for acute pancreatitis. The absolute risk is low but real, and it is a clinically relevant risk to weigh against benefit for otherwise healthy patients.

What does the video say about bariatric surgery (schauer et al., 2017, nejm) still produces greater?

Bariatric surgery (Schauer et al., 2017, NEJM) still produces greater total weight loss than GLP-1 drugs in severe obesity cases. The two treatments are not directly interchangeable, despite semaglutide being far less invasive.

What does the video say about the step trials consistently showed?

The STEP trials consistently showed that combining semaglutide with dietary and behavioral intervention produced better outcomes than medication alone, making lifestyle modification a clinical requirement, not an optional add-on.

What does the video say about weight regain after stopping semaglutide reflects the underlying biology of?

Weight regain after stopping semaglutide reflects the underlying biology of obesity as a chronic condition, not treatment failure. This is the central argument for long-term or indefinite use in appropriate patients.

Sources & references

Citations extracted from our medical team's review. Click any citation to search PubMed.

Educational use only. This fact-check is editorial content for general information. Nothing here is medical advice. Talk to a licensed provider about your specific situation before starting, stopping, or changing any supplement, peptide, or medication regimen.

Read More on This Topic

Our written guides go deeper with dosing details, comparison tables, and medical-team reviewed protocols.

Not medical advice. This video was made by Dr Karan Rajan, not by FormBlends. Our write-up above is an editorial review, not a medical recommendation. Talk to your doctor before making any decisions about medications or treatments.