7 Reasons GLP-1 Users Are Rethinking
How They Protect Their Muscle
Why eating less — and eating "enough protein" — isn't enough to protect what matters most.
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The weight is coming off. Your dose is working. You haven't felt this motivated in years.
But somewhere around week eight or ten, something shifted. You opened a jar that used to be easy. Walked in with grocery bags and quietly put two of them down. You told yourself it was just the medication adjusting.
If you're on a GLP-1 — that quiet shift has a name. And it's not in your head. It's muscle loss. And it's happening to most GLP-1 users who aren't actively protecting against it.
This isn't about the medication not working. It's working. This is about what the medication can't do for you — and what you need to do yourself.
Your Medication Suppresses More Than Just Your Appetite
GLP-1 receptor agonists are extraordinarily effective at quieting hunger signals. That's the mechanism — and it works. But the same pathway that tells your brain "you don't need to eat" also affects a process deep in your muscle cells called mTOR signalling.
mTOR — mechanistic target of rapamycin — is the molecular switch your body uses to trigger muscle protein synthesis. In simple terms: it's the signal that tells your muscles to rebuild after use, to maintain themselves, to stay strong. GLP-1 medications, by reducing food intake and the downstream hormonal responses to eating, suppress mTOR activity. Less food, less leucine, less anabolic signal reaching your muscles.
The result is that even if you're exercising, even if you're trying to eat well, your body's muscle-maintenance signal is running at a fraction of its normal capacity. Your muscles are receiving less instruction to hold on — and without that signal, they quietly begin to go.
"I've been doing HYROX training, which involves a ton of endurance cardio, and I was noticing that I was losing muscle mass. Since using Bare Aminos I have been able to retain muscle despite the high-volume training."
— Lela Niemann, Bare Aminos ★★★★★
You're Eating a Fraction of the Protein Your Muscles Actually Need
The standard recommendation for people on GLP-1 medications is a minimum of 1.2g of protein per kilogram of bodyweight, per day. For an 80kg person, that's 96g of protein. For a 90kg person, that's 108g. Every single day.
Now factor in your appetite. You're eating — on a good day — 1,000 to 1,200 calories total. A 150g chicken breast contains roughly 45g of protein. You'd need to eat close to 250g of chicken daily, on top of other protein sources, just to hit the minimum. Three bites in, and you're already full. The rest goes cold. Then into the fridge. Then into the bin.
A 2024 study from Massachusetts General Hospital found that only 43% of GLP-1 users hit even the minimum recommended protein intake. More than half are running a significant protein deficit every single day. That deficit is exactly where muscle loss begins.
"These products have taken my sport and recovery to the next level. I haven't felt this strong and mobile in years."
— Antonet Louw, Bare Aminos & Hydrating Aminos ★★★★★
The "Just Drink a Protein Shake" Advice Doesn't Work on GLP-1s
You've heard it from your doctor, your dietitian, and every article written about GLP-1 medications: eat more protein. Drink a protein shake. You know the theory. But if you've actually tried to follow it on your medication, you also know the reality.
A standard whey protein shake contains 25–35g of protein, 150–350 calories, and a thick, dense texture that your GLP-1-slowed stomach treats like a meal. Your stomach already empties more slowly on this medication — gastroparesis-like effects are a recognised side effect — which means that shake sits in your gut for two to three hours. The bloating. The heaviness. The nausea that follows. And then you still have to eat the rest of your meals for the day.
For people without GLP-1-suppressed appetites, a protein shake makes sense. For you, it occupies precious stomach real estate, triggers side effects, and — critically — the amino acids still take 60–90 minutes to absorb into your bloodstream. There is a better way to get protein to your muscles, and it was designed for exactly this kind of deficit.
"I love that the flavour is not overpowering and easy to add to my water bottle every morning."
— Suzie Assenmacher, Hydrating Aminos ★★★★★
There's a Leucine Threshold Your Body Needs to Cross — And Most GLP-1 Users Never Reach It
Muscle protein synthesis isn't a continuous dial you can nudge with small amounts of protein. It works more like a switch. Below a certain level of leucine — the most critical of all essential amino acids for triggering muscle repair — almost nothing happens. Above it, the repair process activates.
Research suggests the leucine threshold sits at roughly 2–3g per feeding — and people eating less, eating less frequently, or eating protein sources that are low in leucine are chronically falling short. When you're on a GLP-1 and managing 1,000–1,200 calories per day, you're likely hitting small amounts of protein across small meals — but never enough in any single sitting to cross the threshold and actually trigger the repair signal.
This is why leucine-enriched essential amino acids — not just any protein — are the intervention that leading researchers and nutrition bodies are now recommending specifically for GLP-1 users. You don't need more calories. You need the right concentrated signal, in the right form, at the right amount — to flip the switch.
"Two weeks later, and the results are excellent! More energy to train, less muscle fatigue, more muscle definition."
— Projeni P, Bare Aminos ★★★★★
Speed of Absorption Matters — Especially When Your Stomach Is Running on a Delay
GLP-1 medications slow gastric emptying. That's part of how they work — keeping food in your stomach longer contributes to feelings of fullness. But it also means that anything you eat takes significantly longer to digest, break down, and deliver amino acids to your bloodstream. Whole food protein can take two hours or more. Whey protein shakes can take 60–90 minutes.
Essential amino acids don't require digestion in the same way. They are small enough to absorb directly into the bloodstream through the intestinal wall, bypassing the lengthy digestive process. Independent of how quickly or slowly your stomach is emptying, EAAs reach your muscles in approximately 15 minutes. That speed matters enormously — especially if you've just completed exercise, or if you're trying to trigger muscle protein synthesis between small, infrequent meals.
Think of it this way: your GLP-1 medication has put your digestive system into slow-motion. Every nutrient you consume is arriving late. For most nutrients, that's a manageable delay. For the amino acids your muscles need to hold on to lean mass, every hour of delay is an hour your muscles spent without the signal. EAAs bypass the delay entirely.
"Great product, starting off with a delicious mango flavour, easy dissolvable and best of all works great."
— Muhummad Alli, Bare Aminos ★★★★★
The Weight You're Losing Isn't All Fat
The STEP 1 clinical trial — 1,961 patients, published in The New England Journal of Medicine — found that 39% of total weight lost on semaglutide was lean body mass. Not fat. Muscle. Nearly two-fifths of every kilogram lost was tissue your body spent years building.
This shows up in ways the scale can't capture. Your arms look thinner but feel weaker. Your legs are lighter but less reliable on stairs. Your posture has shifted slightly. The reflection is different from what you imagined. Clinicians call it "sarcopenic obesity risk" — you're reducing your weight but degrading your body composition in a way that actually makes you more fragile, not stronger.
Here's what the research makes clear: this isn't inevitable. The 39% figure is what happens without active muscle protection. People who maintain adequate leucine-enriched amino acid intake alongside their GLP-1 medication show significantly better lean mass retention. The scale can't tell you what you're made of. But your choices can change the answer.
"Great product, I'm 60 years old and it helped me a lot to put on some muscle."
— Ryk Ellis, Bare Aminos ★★★★★
Muscle Loss Makes Weight Regain More Likely — Not Less
Here is the paradox that nobody explains when you start a GLP-1: the way you lose the weight determines how easy it is to keep off. Muscle is your metabolic engine. Each kilogram of lean mass burns approximately 13 calories per day at rest. Lose 5kg of muscle — which is entirely possible on an unprotected GLP-1 course — and your body now burns roughly 65 fewer calories per day without you doing anything differently. That compounds fast.
This is why so many people experience significant weight regain after reducing their GLP-1 dose or stopping the medication altogether. They didn't fail. Their metabolism changed — because the muscle that was powering it quietly disappeared over the months the medication was working. A slower metabolic engine means that normal eating habits, which would have maintained your weight before, now create a surplus.
Protecting your muscle isn't just about how you look or feel today. It's about making your GLP-1 journey permanent. Every day you preserve lean mass is a day you're protecting the metabolic rate that will carry you forward. The medication can change your weight. Only you can protect what that weight is made of.
"Daily non-negotiable. I ordered in bulk — that speaks loud :)"
— Jade, Bare Aminos ★★★★★
What Bare Essential Aminos Delivers
- All 9 essential amino acids in optimised ratios.
- Absorbed in 15 minutes — not hours.
- Only 20 calories.
- Zero gut issues.
- South African made.
- Built for GLP-1 users.
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