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RETA-003-PLUS

$996.00 USD

Retatrutide (RETA+)  is a research peptide acting as a triple agonist at GLP‑1, GIP, and glucagon receptors, designed to explore metabolic regulation and multi-organ biology. Clinical studies have shown significant impacts on body composition, liver fat, lipid profiles, glucose control, and cardiovascular factors.

Emerging findings suggest retatrutide may support improved cardiovascular and hepatic parameters, enhanced kidney function, neuroprotective effects, and potential behavioral modulation pathways tied to appetite and reward signaling. This makes it an advanced tool for research in obesity, metabolic dysfunction, liver steatosis, and neuro-metabolic health.

Milligrams

The development of Retatrutide reflects growing interest in multi-agonist strategies to achieve synergistic effects on energy balance and glycemic control. GLP-1 receptor activation enhances insulin secretion, suppresses glucagon release, and slows gastric emptying. GIP receptor stimulation contributes to insulinotropic activity andlipid regulation. The activation of the glucagon receptor, while counterintuitive at first glance, has shown promise in promoting lipolysis and increasing energy expenditure when balanced with GLP-1/GIP actions.

Weight and Metabolic Outcomes
In Phase 2 trials, retatrutide delivered mean weight loss of up to 24.2% over 48 weeks, with reductions in waist circumference, BMI, fasting glucose, HbA₁c, and blood pressure [1] Taylor & Francis Online+15PMC+15ClinicalTrials.gov+15ADA Meeting News+3Wikipedia+3Cell+3.

Liver Benefits
Participants with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) experienced up to 82% reduction in liver fat, with normalization (<5%) in many cases. Associated biomarkers of inflammation and fibrosis, including K‑18 and pro‑C3, also declined significantly [2] ResearchGate+3Verywell Health+3Wikipedia+3.

Cardiovascular and Lipid Effects
At 48 weeks, retatrutide lowered triglycerides by up to 40.6% and apoC‑III by around 38%, markers tied to cardiovascular risk and metabolic inflammation. This suggests potential cardio-metabolic benefits beyond weight loss alone [3] Wikipedia+15Reuters+15Verywell Health+15.

Renal and Kidney Function
A dedicated study is underway (NCT05936151) to assess retatrutide’s impact on kidney function in overweight or obese individuals with chronic kidney disease, underscoring its potential role in cardiorenal research [4] ClinicalTrials.gov+1Lilly Trials+1.

Brain and Neurological Outcomes
By engaging central GLP‑1, GIP, and glucagon pathways, retatrutide may influence neuroprotective signaling and reward mechanisms. While specific CNS studies are ongoing, the peptide’s capacity to regulate appetite, energy balance, and satiety pathways suggest relevance in behavioral and addiction research.

Holistic Multi-Organ Impact
Retatrutide’s triple receptor agonism offers a unique therapeutic axis:

  • GLP‑1 and GIP pathways support glycemic control, insulin secretion, and satiety.

  • Glucagon receptor activity enhances fat oxidation, energy expenditure, and liver mitochondria function—potentially offering anti-fibrotic and anti-steatotic benefits [5] PubMed+15ADA Meeting News+15PMC+15.

Collectively, these outcomes position retatrutide as a compelling candidate for experimental and translational studies in obesity, NASH, cardio‑renal‑metabolic (CKM) health modeling, and possibly neuro-metabolic disorders. As always, findings remain within controlled clinical or laboratory settings.

Research & References:
  1. Rosenstock J. et al., "Retatrutide Phase 2 efficacy and metabolic outcomes, including weight loss, HbA₁c, blood pressure reductions," N Engl J Med. 2023. ResearchGatePMC
  2. Trial NCT06859268 substudy: liver fat normalization, biomarker improvements in MASLD. Verywell Health+1Wikipedia+1
  3. Retatrutide–induced lipid profile changes (triglycerides, apoC‑III), suggesting cardiovascular benefits. Reuters
  4. Clinical study NCT05936151 exploring retatrutide’s renal function effects in overweight/obese CKD populations. Reuters+9ClinicalTrials.gov+9Lilly Trials+9
  5. Mechanistic review highlighting glucagon receptor agonism in anti-fibrotic liver signaling and metabolic mitochondrial activity. Wikipedia+10ADA Meeting News+10The Lancet+10