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New Study

New research studies have concluded about the results.

As use of the popular anti-diabetic and weight-loss drug Ozempic skyrockets, so have concerns about the medication’s side effects. One such side effect is loss of “lean mass”—body weight that isn’t fat—raising concerns that Ozempic could be reducing muscle mass and strength. 

New research in mice suggests that muscle mass changes less than expected, but muscles may still get weaker, pointing out an urgent need for clinical studies to pin down the full effects of the popular medications.

“If we want to really help the individuals who may be losing muscle mass, then we need to know that they’re actually losing muscle mass,” says Katsu Funai, PhD, associate professor of nutrition and integrative physiology in the University of Utah College of Health and the senior author on the study. “We have data in mice that suggest that things are not as straightforward as they might seem.”

The results are published in Cell Metabolism.