🍪 CompoundTalk uses cookies to improve your experience, analyze traffic, and personalize content. By continuing to use this site, you agree to our Cookie Policy.
Evidence-based GLP-1 & peptide discussion since 2023
ForumsSide Effects & ManagementNausea incidence by dose tier — 6 month update

Nausea incidence by dose tier — 6 month update

Dr.LeslieOBGYN Mon, May 12, 2025 at 3:48 PM 12 replies 1,370 viewsPage 1 of 3
This thread is more than 10 months old. Information may be outdated. Consider searching for more recent discussions.
Dr.LeslieOBGYN
Member
567
2,567
May 2024
Dallas, TX
May 12, 2025 at 5:13 PM#1

I've been on semaglutide for 6 months (currently at 2.4 mg maintenance dose) and I've refined a nausea management protocol through trial and error that's taken me from "can't get out of bed" to "barely notice it." Sharing because I wish someone had given me this on day 1.

The Protocol:

Day of injection (I inject Sunday evenings):

  • Light, bland dinner 2 hours before injection (rice, grilled chicken, nothing fatty)
  • Inject at bedtime (9-10 PM) — sleep through the initial wave
  • Ginger capsule 250 mg with the pre-injection dinner

Days 1-3 post-injection (the worst window):

  • 6 small meals instead of 3 regular ones — no meal larger than a side plate
  • Zero fried, greasy, or high-fat foods
  • Ginger capsule 250 mg before breakfast and dinner
  • Room-temp or warm beverages only (cold drinks seem to worsen it for me)
  • Peppermint tea after meals (if no reflux issues)
  • 20-minute walk after eating — motion helps gastric emptying

Days 4-7:

  • Gradually resume normal-ish eating
  • Keep ginger tea handy but don't need capsules usually
  • Can tolerate some fat in meals but still keep portions moderate

Daily throughout:

  • 80+ oz water (sipped consistently, not chugged)
  • B6 25 mg twice daily
  • No lying down within 30 min of eating

This took me from rating my nausea 8/10 at the 0.5 mg dose to 2-3/10 at the 2.4 mg dose. The improvement wasn't immediate — my gut also adapted over time. But the protocol made the adaptation period survivable.

22 2Dr.BariatricHTX, LindaRN_retired, tommy_boulder and 19 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
mel_PDX
Member
189
890
Dec 2024
Portland, OR
May 12, 2025 at 5:30 PM#2

Saving this entire post. I'm on week 3 and the nausea is kicking my butt. Quick question — when you say ginger capsules, is there a specific brand or type? I bought ginger root capsules from the grocery store and they don't seem to do much.

Last edited: May 12, 2025 at 11:30 PM
47 22Dr.KarenChen, Dr.NateNeph, PharmD_Rodriguez and 44 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
amy_econ_NJ
Member
567
2,567
May 2024
Princeton, NJ
May 12, 2025 at 5:47 PM#3

I use Nature's Way Ginger Root 550 mg capsules. The key is to get ones that contain actual ginger root or ginger extract, not "ginger flavoring." Check that the label says Zingiber officinale. Some people prefer gin-gins (ginger chews/candies) for acute nausea because they also stimulate saliva production which can help, but I find the capsules more consistent for prevention.

Last edited: May 12, 2025 at 8:47 PM
9 13sean_dublin, hannah_MT, Dr.SportsMedIN and 6 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Sigma-Aldrich — Research-Grade Standards

Certified reference materials, analytical reagents, and research-grade standards for peptide verification. Trusted by laboratories worldwide.

Shop Reference Standards
hyun_seoul
Member
345
1,456
Jul 2024
Seoul, KR
May 12, 2025 at 6:04 PM#4

This is an excellent, practical protocol. I'm going to print this for my patients if that's okay.

A few clinical additions:

  • The bedtime injection strategy is supported by pharmacokinetic logic — semaglutide reaches peak plasma concentration about 1-3 days post-injection, so injecting at night means the peak occurs during daytime when you're upright and moving (which is better for gastric emptying than lying down)
  • The 20-minute post-meal walk is evidence-based — even gentle walking accelerates gastric emptying by 30-40% [1]
  • B6 (pyridoxine) mechanism: it modulates serotonin synthesis in the CNS, and since GLP-1 RA-induced nausea is partly serotonergic, this makes pharmacological sense

One addition for severe cases: acupressure wristbands (Sea-Bands). The P6 (Neiguan) acupressure point has modest evidence for nausea reduction. Low-cost, no side effects, worth trying.

[1] Franke A, et al. J Gastrointestin Liver Dis. 2008.

15 15BariatricNurseD, MASHdoc_SA, GenomicsKate and 12 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
DadBodDave
Member
187
923
Nov 2024
Ohio
May 12, 2025 at 6:21 PM#5

i just want to say thank you for being so specific about the TIMING. every other post i've read just says "eat smaller meals" but nobody breaks down day-by-day what that looks like. this is the first time i feel like i have an actual PLAN and not just vague advice. starting sema next week and i have this saved to my phone. 💛

21 4JakeBK_lifts, DerekSJ_a1c, paige_pharma and 18 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Similar Threads

Nausea incidence by dose tier — STEP and SURMOUNT meta-analysis16 replies
Constipation on GLP-1: pathophysiology and fiber protocol5 replies
Alopecia on GLP-1 — telogen effluvium differential diagnosis3 replies
Gallbladder disease risk — cholelithiasis data from clinical trials12 replies
Pancreatitis risk assessment — pooled safety analysis15 replies
ForumsNewTrendingMembersAccount

Log In

Forgot password?
No account? Register