✓ Medically reviewed by Dr. Anjmun Sharma, MD · Updated 2026-05-304 min read

GLP-1 Medications Before Surgery: What to Tell Your Doctor

If you take a GLP-1 and have a procedure with sedation coming up, this is a conversation to have early. Here is why, in plain language.

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The short answer

GLP-1 medications slow how quickly the stomach empties. That is part of how they reduce appetite, but it also means food can stay in the stomach longer than expected. Under anesthesia or deep sedation, that raises the risk of aspiration (stomach contents entering the lungs). Because of this, anesthesia and surgical guidance has increasingly advised pausing GLP-1 medications before a planned procedure. Always tell your surgeon and anesthesiologist that you take one.

Why it matters

For most everyday situations, slowed stomach emptying is harmless and even helpful for weight loss. The exception is when you will be sedated and your protective reflexes are suppressed. A fuller-than-expected stomach is the concern, which is why your care team wants to know.

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What the guidance generally says

This is exactly why a GLP-1 should be physician-supervised. A supervised program coordinates a pause around a planned procedure and a safe restart afterward, so you stay safe without losing your progress. If you have surgery scheduled, tell us, and we will help you and your surgical team plan it.

Restarting after surgery

After the procedure, when you are eating and recovering normally, your physician guides when and at what dose to resume, often easing back in rather than jumping to your prior dose. Planning the restart is part of keeping both your safety and your results on track.

On a GLP-1 with a procedure coming up?

A physician-supervised program helps you pause and restart safely. Take our 2-minute quiz or call to talk it through.

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need to stop a GLP-1 before surgery?

Often yes, at least temporarily. GLP-1 medications slow stomach emptying, which can raise the risk of aspiration under anesthesia or deep sedation, so anesthesia guidance has increasingly advised pausing them before a planned procedure. The exact timing is an individual decision your surgical, anesthesia, and prescribing teams make together. Never hide that you take one, and do not guess on your own.

Why do GLP-1s matter for anesthesia?

They slow how fast the stomach empties, so food can remain longer than expected. Under sedation, the reflexes that protect your airway are suppressed, and a fuller stomach raises the risk of aspiration (contents entering the lungs). That mechanical effect, harmless day to day, is the specific concern around sedation, which is why your team wants to know in advance.

Does this apply to dental work or an endoscopy?

It can apply to any procedure involving sedation or anesthesia, which includes some dental procedures and endoscopies. Tell the provider doing the procedure that you take a GLP-1 so they can decide on the safest plan. When in doubt, disclose it and let the clinical team make the call.

When can I restart my GLP-1 after surgery?

When you are recovering and eating normally again, and your physician guides the timing and dose, often easing back in rather than resuming the full prior dose immediately. Planning the restart with your prescriber keeps both your safety and your weight-loss progress on track.

What if my surgery is soon and I just took my dose?

Tell your surgical and anesthesia team right away. They may adjust the plan, the fasting instructions, or the timing based on when you last took it. This is a clinical decision for your care team, not something to manage alone, which is one more reason supervised GLP-1 care matters.

This article is informational only and not medical advice. Speak with a licensed physician before starting or changing any GLP-1 therapy. Individual results vary. New Hope Weight Loss is a physician-supervised medical weight loss clinic in Costa Mesa, CA. Eligibility for treatment is determined during the medical consultation. Compounded semaglutide and compounded tirzepatide are not the same products as Wegovy®, Ozempic®, Mounjaro®, or Zepbound®.

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Wegovy® and Ozempic® are registered trademarks of Novo Nordisk A/S. Mounjaro® and Zepbound® are registered trademarks of Eli Lilly and Company. New Hope Weight Loss is not affiliated with or endorsed by these companies. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are prepared by licensed U.S. pharmacies and are not FDA-approved, not brand-identical, and not reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality.