Weight loss Meds

Anyone have any success with a weight kiss Med by prescription called Contrave? My Med wants me to try it and hopefully it will work for me. I have changed my diet but don't see much change in my weight. I am classified as morbidly obese and really hope this works for me. Any positive feedback is welcomed.
NO but as a weight loss struggler myself, I feel your pain.I am working to reach my goals also. Perhaps we can reach them together!!

I just cut out all sodas of any form, I also began walking as my form of exercise. I also bought a weight set off craigslist, that I use.

Drink plenty of water and eat only healthy foods. count calories. It has helped me.

Good luck,
M.M.
handyGiraffe's Avatar
Leave the soda, pasta and white bread products off..oil and basalmic salad dressings ...no white cream based salad dressings.(ranch, cesar, etc).try to walk as much as possible...do this for two weeks and see if it helps you...(goes without saying..no fast food, fries, burgers..nothing fried!)
Get clinical nutritionist, Cliff Sheats LEAN BODIES book(s).......I did that a number of years ago (suggested by a close friend). By learning new ideas (per my own nutrition / exercise / lifestyle) I was able to drop the targeted weight and keep it off "for good".

Weight Loss Diet Pills are sketchy imo. I'm told they can work...however you're looking at a temporary fix at best imo. You might drop 40, 50, 60 or so pounds. But discouragement settles in for some reason, you "down-cycle" and six weeks / months later you've gained that weight back plus an additional ten-twenty lbs you didn't have before.

It's a terrible cycle to be trapped in.....but it's real nonetheless.

The "pill" (metaphorically speaking) one really needs is a good dose of Persistence & Commitment. And that comes from gaining knowledge about the relationship your body should have with food. Accomplish that task first (ie: how you need to properly "fuel your body")....then take on the next step: a serious workout regimen that you're willing to commit to(in tandem with a great nutrition plan).

I don't know exactly what "morbidly obese" entails (per you). Diet / exercise may not necessarily be the answer. You may be a candidate for surgery....do the research; a doctor / surgeon should be able to help with private consultation.
Leave the soda, pasta and white bread products off..oil and basalmic salad dressings ...no white cream based salad dressings.(ranch, cesar, etc).try to walk as much as possible...do this for two weeks and see if it helps you...(goes without saying..no fast food, fries, burgers..nothing fried!) Originally Posted by handyGiraffe
Pasta is perhaps my achilles Heel, I am 100 percent Italian and you know we love our Pastas, but you all have given me very good advice.
goodman0422's Avatar
Its a combination of bupropion (a anti-depressant) and naltrexone (reverses the effects of opioid like oxycontin as well as alcohol)
I would look at the most common potential side effects for each drug below.

https://www.drugs.com/sfx/bupropion-side-effects.html

https://www.drugs.com/sfx/naltrexone-side-effects.html

I've never taken it but most weight loss drugs are found to be detrimental to your health eventually. Weight loss drugs are big business because most Americans won't exercise. But there is not much done to ensure they are safe before marketing. The pharmacuetical companies justify the health risks of the drug claiming the excess weight the patient is carrying outweighs the risk presented by the drug.
Honestly, I would recommend you just go for 15-20 min walk 3 times a week.
Good luck
I have lost 40 pounds in 5 months by cutting out sugar and dramatically reducing carbs. Exercise in any form essential. There are days I would KILL for a pbj, I allow my self a "splurge" every 8 - 10 days.
Zena's Avatar
  • Zena
  • 02-17-2017, 07:15 AM
Good post. Good thread. I'm at the beginning of my journey. Wish me luck. I need a miracle, almost !
  • Luxie
  • 02-17-2017, 01:15 PM
Tbh, as someone who has lost over 100 lbs the easiest way for me to lose weight - and keep it off - was to switch my entire lifestyle. Diets don't work. You eventually have to go off the meds. Just make a lifestyle change and make it permanent. I went vegan and started doing yoga and it's done wonders.
Try cutting out sugar. The Glycemic index in key. Eat foods with lo GI.
I have changed my diet but don't see much change in my weight. Originally Posted by Luke_Wyatt
What are you doing in regards to exercise? Changing your diet is a great start but I would slowly add in some exercise routines to complement it. I would stay away from the pills. Most of them are not approved by the FDA and a few people I know that have taken them had side effects. Good luck.
What are you doing in regards to exercise? Changing your diet is a great start but I would slowly add in some exercise routines to complement it. I would stay away from the pills. Most of them are not approved by the FDA and a few people I know that have taken them had side effects. Good luck. Originally Posted by Clark W. Griswold
Well to be honest I can't or have very limited mobility - my heaviest I been have been 463 and now roughly 350 lbs but I don't think I have the endurance for a gym membership. I was thinking if I could get below 300 lbs then perhaps a membership would be ideal.
jbravo_123's Avatar
Assuming you don't have some sort of hormonal issue that's forcing your body to maintain body fat, if your goal is long term weight loss, you're going to need to modify your diet permanently. To lose weight, fundamentally, you need to have calories in < calories out, nothing more. Exercise helps, but it won't offset a terrible diet. Eventually, yes you'll need to exercise to continue your weight loss and build muscle (muscle burns more calories per hour at a resting state than fat does), but that can come once you get your eating habits under control.

The key to making these types of changes is to not try to make too drastic a change at once. Make a small change, stick with it until it becomes habit, then make another small change, etc.
dirty dog's Avatar
I would assume that with your weight you also have a problem with type 2 diabetes. I have lost 160 pounds over the past year. After my wife passed and with the beginning of retirement I was very depressed and my weight ballooned and my diabetes became very out of control. Beginning in Nov of 2015 I began a life style change with regards to diet. I cut out all bread and startches and did a modified protein diet supplemented with fresh fruit and salads. By August of 2016 I had lost 100 pounds, but I was still on 600 units of two different insulins a day. I had been discussed by pass surgery and my surgeon told me that I would no longer be diabetic after the surgery. So in August I did it. He explained that the way the intestine is rerouted 97 percent of patients have a significant change in their diabetic status or they go into remission. Since the surgery I have lost an additional 60 pounds and have reached my goal weight. The best news is I am on no diabetic medication and my AC1 is 5.1. It has remained below 5.2 for the past 6 months and I have no restriction on what I eat just the amount. Do yourself a favor and look into it especially if you are diabetic.
Inversion's Avatar
Part of the ''weight loss'' Contrave causes is surely due to the Vomiting it can cause. I'd be careful, it does look safer than Belviq (Lorcaserin) though. But you'd probably be better off with something old-fashioned like say... 'Clen and lift bruh!'