4.8 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 2 December 2025
⏱️ 91 minutes
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Episode Summary: The Cardiometabolic Revolution of Semaglutide, Tirzepatide, and Beyond
This episode provides a comprehensive, evidence-based update on GLP-1 receptor agonists (anti-obesity medications), featuring Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum, Dr. Austin Baraki, and Dr. Spencer Nadolsky. The hosts review the rapid evolution of these drugs—from short-acting injectables to potent multi-agonists like Tirzepatide (Mounjaro/Zepbound) and Retatrutide—which now achieve weight loss efficacy rivaling bariatric surgery.
The discussion clarifies the broad, weight-independent benefits these drugs offer for cardiovascular, renal, and liver health (CKM Syndrome). The experts address common concerns, including the high incidence of gastrointestinal side effects and the heavily debated risk of muscle mass loss, concluding the risk is often overblown and easily mitigated by resistance training and adequate protein intake. Finally, they discuss the biggest hurdle to access: cost, and the role of newer oral and compounded options in the evolving landscape.
⏱️ Episode Timestamps
🔗 Resources and Next Steps
Work with Experts on Cardiometabolic Health:
Connect with Dr. Austin Baraki and Dr. Spencer Nadolsky: https://joinvineyard.com/
For evidence-based resistance training programs: barbellmedicine.com/training-programs
For individualized medical and training consultation: barbellmedicine.com/coaching
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I. Basic Science and The Evolution of Anti-Obesity Medication
Defining GLP-1 and the Incretin Effect
GLP-1 (Glucagon-like peptide 1) is a naturally occurring peptide hormone released by the intestines after food ingestion.1 It plays a role in the incretin effect, which enhances insulin secretion from the pancreas.2 However, natural GLP-1 is quickly broken down by the DPP-4 enzyme, limiting its efficacy.3 Modern GLP-1 receptor agonists (like Semaglutide and Tirzepatide) are synthetic analogs engineered to be resistant to DPP-4 breakdown, allowing them to stick around longer and reach receptors in the brain to modulate appetite.
The concept of food noise describes the persistent, relentless, non-hunger-related thoughts about food that many individuals with obesity experience.5 Patients often report that the cessation of this food noise is one of the most profound effects of the medication, freeing up cognitive energy previously dedicated to ruminating over food.
The Rapidly Advancing Pipeline
The evolution of this drug class has been defined by three trends:
Upcoming agents include oral options like Orforglipron and high-dose oral Semaglutide, which promise easier administration and potentially lower costs.8 Triple agonists like Retatrutide are showing efficacy in the mid-20% total weight loss range, rivaling metabolic surgery outcomes.
II. Efficacy and Broad Health Benefits
Weight Loss Efficacy
The clinical data demonstrates significant efficacy, classifying these drugs as game-changers:
Weight-Independent Organ Protection (CKM Syndrome)
A significant portion of the benefit derived from these medications is weight-independent, meaning it's separate from the mass lost.12 The drugs exert pleiotropic (multiple) effects across organ systems, leading to the coining of CKM Syndrome (Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic Syndrome).
Emerging and Future Benefits
Research is exploring the impact of GLP-1 agonists on:
III. Side Effects and Mitigating Muscle Loss Concerns
Common and Rare Side Effects
The vast majority of side effects are Gastrointestinal and highest during the initial dose escalation:
Muscle Mass Loss: Hype vs. Data
The concern that these agents cause a unique, disproportionate amount of skeletal muscle loss is largely overblown hype.
IV. Access, Cost, and Future Outlook
The Biggest Hurdle: Cost
The primary barrier to access remains cost, with list prices for branded medications often exceeding $1,000 per month, despite lower net costs for manufacturers.18 Insurance approval often requires complex Prior Authorization (PA) processes, which overwhelm standard primary care practices.
The Role of Compounding and Older Medications
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome back to the Barbell Medicine podcast. I'm Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum. And today we're tackling a topic that has fundamentally changed the landscape of health, weight management, and chronic disease, the rise of anti-obesity medications, specifically GLP1 receptor agonists. Now, whether you're an athlete, a health or fitness professional, or just someone trying to navigate your own health, you've heard the names, Ozempic, Wagovi, Monjaro, but the story has evolved rapidly and so has the data. And in this podcast, we'll provide an update on these medications. Are they just for weight loss, or do they also help with other medical conditions? And just what does the data say about efficacy, side effects, and the loss of muscle mass? To help us out, I have two of the best minds in the business. |
| 0:41.8 | First, the second most handsome doctor in North America, Dr. Austin Baraki, and obesity medicine expert, Dr. Spencer Nadolsky. |
| 0:43.9 | Welcome to the show, guys. |
| 0:45.2 | Am I the third? |
| 0:47.5 | I don't know. |
| 0:48.2 | I just assume that everybody that we ever have on the podcast is in the top 10. |
| 0:52.0 | Okay. |
| 0:52.5 | I'll take top 10. |
| 0:53.7 | I'll think what I can get honestly. |
| 0:55.0 | No, that's this, yeah, for sure. |
| 0:57.0 | But, you know, people are like, are you, Jordan, do you, are you the most handsome? I'm like, no, no, no. This is an inside joke. And if you're a long time listener of the show, you know who this is the most handsome doctor, North America. Dr. Baraki, what's going on, man? |
| 1:07.3 | Hey, I'm doing okay. |
| 1:08.3 | Glad to have Spencer here to cover this topic. |
| 1:11.0 | I'm attending on the wards have Spencer here to cover this topic. |
| 1:11.0 | I'm attending on the wards in the hospital at the moment, but I was able to sneak away and |
| 1:15.0 | set some time aside for this conversation. Yeah. And then if you guys don't know who Dr. Spencer |
| 1:19.6 | Nandalski is, he's been on the show. I think you've been on our podcast a few times. We've been |
| 1:22.9 | on your podcast. We actually met when I was in medical school in Virginia. I believe you were in residency at the same. Yeah. Yeah. Shout out to Norfolk. Jordan drove up in his M4 while he's in med school. And I was like, Jesus Christ, I don't, I'm resident. I'm freaking poor. Well, yeah, that barbell medicine money, you know. That barbell, the big barbell. Yeah. Can you, before we pop into this we do have a lot of questions uh and a lot of stuff to get to but real quick spencer can you give people just a rundown who may not be familiar with you uh what your background is and what you're doing now yeah very quickly NCAA athlete was a heavyweight wrestler. Unc. Chapel Hill actually went to |
| 2:02.1 | Michigan State to play football. I wrestled there as well. I ended up transferring, trying to do both. |
| 2:06.7 | Realize I wasn't Bo Jackson had to pick one sport. Ended up going with wrestling. Then went to |
| 2:11.9 | med school, went to Virginia College of osteopathic medicine at the time. That's what it was called. |
| 2:16.2 | It's now Edward Vio, something Virginia College. Went to family medicine residency at VCU in Newport News in Virginia. |
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