Why GLP-1 side effects cluster after shot day — and when they ease


Ask a roomful of GLP-1 users when they feel queasy and you’ll hear the same answer with different words: “the day or two after my shot.” That consistency isn’t coincidence — it’s the medication’s curve at work.

The post-shot window

After a weekly injection, medication levels climb to a peak over roughly 1–3 days. GI side effects — nausea, and for some people vomiting or stomach upset — track that climb. In the published trials, these were the most commonly reported side effects: for example, ~44% of participants reported nausea at some point in STEP 1 (semaglutide 2.4 mg over 68 weeks), and about a quarter to a third in SURMOUNT-1 (tirzepatide), mostly during dose escalation.

Two encouraging details hide in that data:

  1. Side effects were mostly mild to moderate and concentrated in titration weeks — they typically fade as your body adapts to each dose step.
  2. “At some point during a 68–72 week trial” is very different from “every week”. Many participants had isolated episodes, not a weekly ordeal.

A week in phases

Map a typical week and the pattern becomes practical:

  • Days 0–1 (absorption): levels rising. If you get queasy, it usually starts here. Light meals and hydration help many people.
  • Days 1–3 (peak): strongest appetite suppression — and the window where GI symptoms cluster.
  • Days 3–5 (steady): for most people, the easiest stretch.
  • Days 6–7 (fading): the weekly trough. Appetite often returns; this is hunger-with-a-reason, not backsliding.

Knowing the phase changes how you plan: schedule the big dinner out for the steady phase, not day 1. Expect the day-7 appetite and have a plan for it.

Logging patterns worth showing your provider

“I get nauseous sometimes” is hard for a clinician to act on. “Nausea logged in 5 of my last 6 cycles, always days 1–2, easing by day 3, worse since the step-up to 1 mg” is genuinely useful — it distinguishes a normal titration pattern from something that needs attention.

That’s the logging style ShotLock is built around: quick daily check-ins that land on your cycle timeline, compared honestly against what trial participants reported — including telling you when you haven’t logged enough to compare.

When it’s not a pattern question

Persistent vomiting, signs of dehydration, severe abdominal pain, or anything that scares you isn’t a “wait for the steady phase” situation — contact your provider. Cycle awareness is for understanding the normal; it’s not a tool for triaging the abnormal.

General information, not medical advice. Trial figures are cited from published study reports and reflect trial populations, not predictions about you.

Your next shot is the one that matters.

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