GLP-1 Side Effects: How to Manage Nausea, Constipation, and More
Most GLP-1 side effects appear in the first 4 weeks and fade. Some don't. Here's the practical, doctor-reviewed playbook for managing what actually happens — what's normal, when to call us, and exactly what to do for each common issue.
The general timeline
- Weeks 1–4: the strongest side effects. Mild-to-moderate nausea, occasional GI distress, slightly altered appetite, sometimes fatigue. Worst on dose-escalation days.
- Weeks 4–8: the body adjusts. Most patients describe minimal ongoing side effects.
- Months 3+: baseline. Most patients are at "I barely notice it." Side effects that haven't settled by month 3 warrant a dose review.
Nausea — the most common side effect
About 40-50% of patients report some nausea in the first month. For most, it's mild and improves quickly. Practical mitigation:
- Eat smaller, more frequent meals — three large meals a day is harder than five smaller ones.
- Stay hydrated, but with small sips throughout the day rather than large volumes at once.
- Avoid greasy, heavily fried, or high-fat meals on dose-escalation days.
- Cool foods often feel better than hot foods when you're nauseated. Yogurt, smoothies, fruit.
- Ginger tea, peppermint tea, or sucking on ice chips helps some patients.
- Don't lie down immediately after eating.
- If you're vomiting more than once per dose-day, contact us — we'll likely slow the titration.
Constipation
GLP-1 slows GI motility, which affects bowel movements as well as gastric emptying. About 20-25% of patients report constipation in the first weeks. The fix:
- Hydration first. Most GLP-1 patients underdrink water. Target 64–80 oz daily.
- Fiber: psyllium husk, chia seeds (1-2 tbsp), vegetables, berries.
- Movement: walking 20+ minutes a day helps.
- Short-term acceptable: Miralax (osmotic, gentle), stool softener like Colace.
- Avoid: stimulant laxatives daily long-term (creates dependence).
- If constipation persists more than 5–7 days or is painful, tell us at your next visit.
Diarrhea
Less common than constipation, but happens. Usually self-limited.
- BRAT-ish diet for a day or two: bananas, rice, applesauce, toast.
- Hydration with electrolytes — coconut water, Pedialyte, or LMNT.
- Avoid dairy temporarily if it's making things worse.
- If diarrhea lasts more than 3 days or you can't keep fluids down, contact us.
Fatigue
Often misunderstood. Two main causes:
- Reduced caloric intake. Many GLP-1 patients dramatically cut calories without realizing it. The fix is to make sure each meal has adequate protein (20–30 g) and some complex carbs.
- B12 deficiency. Reduced food intake can subtly reduce B12 over weeks. We screen at intake; if borderline, we add B12 injections.
Fatigue persisting beyond 4–6 weeks warrants labs — thyroid, B12, iron, electrolytes. Don't just push through it.
Muscle loss prevention
Some lean mass loss is unavoidable with rapid weight loss. The literature suggests 25–35% of total weight lost on GLP-1 may be lean mass — higher than ideal. Mitigation:
- Protein priority: 0.7–1.0 g per pound of goal body weight. For a 150-lb goal, that's 105–150 g protein per day.
- Resistance training: 2–3 times per week. Doesn't need to be heavy — bodyweight, bands, light dumbbells all work.
- Adequate sleep: 7–8 hours. Muscle protein synthesis is sleep-dependent.
- DEXA scan at baseline and 6 months if available, to track body composition.
- Patients who do these consistently retain noticeably more muscle and report better long-term outcomes.
Heartburn / reflux
Slowed gastric emptying can worsen reflux in patients prone to it. Mitigation:
- Smaller meals.
- Don't lie down within 2-3 hours of eating.
- Avoid trigger foods you already know about.
- Famotidine (Pepcid) is acceptable short-term if you're already a heartburn-prone patient.
- If reflux is new and severe, tell us; we may slow the dose.
Injection site reactions
Mild redness, itching, or a small lump at the injection site is common and harmless. Rotate sites (abdomen vs. thigh vs. upper arm) so no single area gets overworked. If you notice persistent redness, warmth, or spreading inflammation, contact us — could be infection.
Mood changes
Some patients on GLP-1 have reported mood changes including increased anxiety or low mood. The FDA continues to monitor signal data. If you notice:
- New or worsening depression
- Suicidal thoughts
- Increased anxiety
Contact us right away. We may pause the medication and coordinate with mental health support.
- Severe abdominal pain, especially radiating to the back (possible pancreatitis)
- Persistent vomiting that prevents you from keeping fluids down
- Sudden severe upper-right abdominal pain (possible gallbladder)
- Vision changes (especially in patients with diabetes — possible retinopathy worsening)
- Allergic reaction: hives, swelling of face/lips/tongue, difficulty breathing
- Suicidal thoughts
- Severe diarrhea with signs of dehydration (dark urine, dizziness, confusion)
If we're closed and any of these occur, go to urgent care or the ER. Don't wait.
What we adjust if side effects persist
Side effects severe enough to interfere with daily life don't mean GLP-1 is wrong for you. Adjustments we make:
- Slow the titration. Stay at the current dose for an extra 2–4 weeks before stepping up.
- Hold or step down. If a higher dose triggered new issues, drop to the prior dose.
- Switch agents. Patients who can't tolerate semaglutide sometimes do well on tirzepatide and vice versa.
- Add support. B12 for fatigue, anti-emetic strategies for nausea, fiber for constipation.
- Stop, if necessary. If side effects don't resolve with adjustment, we stop. Quality of life matters.
Frequently asked questions
How long do GLP-1 side effects last?
Strongest in weeks 1–4 and on dose-escalation days, then fade. By weeks 4–8, most patients describe minimal ongoing side effects. About 5–8% have persistent symptoms requiring dose adjustment or stopping.
What can I do for GLP-1 nausea?
Smaller frequent meals, hydration in small sips, avoid greasy foods, ginger or peppermint tea, cool foods over hot. If interfering with daily life, your physician may slow the titration. Don't push through severe nausea.
How do I prevent GLP-1 constipation?
Hydration (64–80 oz/day), fiber (psyllium, chia, vegetables), movement. Miralax acceptable short-term. Tell your physician at your next visit if it persists.
When should I call my doctor?
Severe abdominal pain (pancreatitis risk), persistent vomiting, sudden upper-right pain (gallbladder), vision changes, allergic reaction, suicidal thoughts. Any of these warrant urgent contact.
Will I lose muscle on GLP-1?
Some lean mass loss is unavoidable with rapid weight loss. Mitigation: protein 0.7–1.0 g/lb goal weight, resistance training 2–3×/week, adequate sleep, DEXA tracking.
Why am I so tired on GLP-1?
Usually reduced caloric intake plus blood sugar adjustment. Make sure each meal has adequate protein and complex carbs. B12 helps some. If fatigue persists, we check thyroid, B12, iron.
What if I miss a dose?
Within 5 days: take it ASAP, resume normal weekly schedule. More than 5 days: skip and resume at next regular dose. Don't double up. Multiple missed doses: contact us — may need lower restart dose.
This article is informational only and not medical advice. Speak with a licensed physician about side effects you're experiencing. Individual experience varies. Wegovy® and Ozempic® are registered trademarks of Novo Nordisk A/S. Mounjaro® and Zepbound® are registered trademarks of Eli Lilly and Company.