A focused guide to tracking a tirzepatide protocol — the titration, the unique GIP-side effects, sulfur burps, and what to log week-over-week.
At a glance
Tirzepatide is a dual GLP-1 / GIP receptor agonist marketed as Mounjaro for type 2 diabetes and Zepbound for chronic weight management. The GIP arm is what distinguishes it from semaglutide, and most of the practical differences in side-effect profile and titration experience trace back to it. This post is the single-peptide tracking guide. If you are weighing tirzepatide against semaglutide, that comparison post is separate.
Tirzepatide activates both GLP-1 and GIP incretin receptors. The combined effect: slower gastric emptying, reduced appetite, improved postprandial glycemic control, and at maintenance dose, meaningful weight loss in trials. The GIP component appears to contribute additional weight loss and, anecdotally, a different GI side-effect signature.
The standard prescribed titration:
Each step is a re-evaluation point. The pattern is: change dose, hold 4 weeks, evaluate, step up only if side effects are manageable.
The sulfur burps are a hallmark of GIP activation in some users. They are not dangerous but worth logging — they often correlate with delayed gastric emptying and may be a warning sign that you stepped up too fast.
This is the most useful retrospective data you will have. Peptide IA stores it per-step so you can see at a glance which step was the inflection point.
Trial average weight loss at maintenance dose runs higher than semaglutide. Individual response varies enormously. The first 8 weeks are usually dominated by appetite suppression and side-effect management; meaningful body-composition change shows up over months. Lean mass loss is a real risk at aggressive deficits — protein intake and resistance training matter.
Tirzepatide is a prescription medication. Pancreatitis is a known rare risk; persistent severe abdominal pain warrants stopping and getting evaluated. Gallbladder issues occur. Contraindicated in personal/family history of medullary thyroid cancer or MEN2. Discuss with your physician before starting or changing dose.
Peptide IA is an educational and self-tracking tool. Nothing in this post is medical advice. Doses mentioned reflect what is commonly reported in research literature — they are not recommendations. Always consult a qualified physician before starting, changing, or stopping any protocol.