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Myths, Read Against the EvidenceArticle 12 of 27

Does Ozempic cause "stomach paralysis"?

Slower stomach emptying is part of how these peptides work. "Paralysis" overstates what's happening.

GASTROPARESIS VS SLOWING

There is a medical condition called gastroparesis: severe, chronic delayed stomach emptying, usually diagnosed in people with long-standing diabetes or after certain abdominal surgeries. The peptide does not cause that condition. What the peptide does is slow stomach emptying as part of the mechanism that reduces appetite.

WHAT THE TRIALS SHOW

In the pooled studies behind the Wegovy approval, severe GI side effects (the most extreme cases of nausea, vomiting, and stomach discomfort) showed up in about 1 in 25 people on the peptide, compared with about 1 in 100 on placebo. A specific substudy in STEP-1 measured stomach emptying at 20 weeks using a paracetamol-absorption test and did not find a residual delay at that point. The Wegovy label does caution against use in patients with severe gastroparesis at the start of treatment.

What this means

Routine delayed emptying is built in. The popular paralysis framing mixes the routine slow-down with the rare severe case. Two different things.

Popular framing collapses routine slowing and rare severe retention into one word. The trials separate them, and so should the conversation.

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References01 sources
  1. See source line · 2026
    Wegovy prescribing information (FDA-approved label), Warnings on delayed gastric emptying. Pooled STEP 1-3 safety analysis: Wharton et al. 2022 (PMID 34514682).
    Source line — see article body
Does Ozempic cause "stomach paralysis"? · Catalyst / Science Explained · Catalyst